Hosts and symptoms
Tan spot is found primarily on wheat, but is also found to infect other cereals and grasses including triticale, barley, and rye, but are less frequently affected. Other grass species effected by the pathogen include Siberian wheat grass, sand bluestem, meadow brome, sheep fescue, June grass, little bluestem, green foxtail, needle and thread, and tall wheatgrass. While these are not necessarily agriculture crop hosts such as wheat, the pathogen is able to form and survive on many grass hosts, which can eventually venture into wheat fields. Other important grass susceptible hosts include smooth brome which can be found in pastures, as well as quack grass that is found in the environment and considered a weed in many agricultural crops. Lesions typically appear on both upper and lower leaf surfaces, and initially are tan to brown specks. Eventually, the tan to brown specks expand to larger irregular, oval, lens-shaped, ellipse, tan blotches with a yellow ring around them. The yellow ring is often referred to as a halo, yellow discoloration as chlorosis, and browning/death of leaf tissue as necrosis. The development of a dark brown to black spot in the center the lesion is characteristic of the disease. If warmer temperatures and moist conditions persist, spores known as conidia will move up plant as secondary inoculum and can also infect head/spikes. Symptoms on the head are indistinct, but can cause brownish glumes, and grains can have a reddish appearance similar to the pathogen ''Fusarium''.Disease cycle
''P. tritici-repentis'' survives and overwinters as pseudothecia on stubble from the previous year's infected crop. The pseudothecia containEnvironment
The fungus requires 6-24+ hours of moisture to infect a leaf. This means that rain, significant dew or high canopy humidity are factors that can lead to infection. Optimal temperatures for symptom development range from .De Wolf, Erick "Tan Spot." Kansas State Plant Pathology (n.d):n.pag. Kansas State Extension, Apr. 2008. Web.Burrows Mary, Grey William, and Olmstead Jeannie. "Fungal, Bacterial and Physiological Leaf Diseases of Cereal Crops (wheat, Durum, Barley)." Fungal, Bacterial and Physiological Leaf Diseases of Cereal Crops (wheat, Durum, Barley)." (n.d.): n. pag. Montana State University. Web.Control
Since this disease can cause considerable yield loss, effective control is very important. The most effective method of long term control is crop rotation. There is a considerable difference in the fungal population after one year of rotation. Examples of non-host crops include mustard, flax, and soybean. Some other control options include tillage. Foliar fungicides can also be used as control methods.Carigano, M., S.A. Staggenborg, and J.P. Shroyer. 2008. Management practices to minimize tan spot in a continuous wheat rotation. Agronomy Journal 100:145–153. Since the top two leaves contribute the most to yield, it is important to protect them. Some effective fungicides include, but are not limited to, Headline, Quilt, and Stratego. There are however, resistant varieties that make most methods of control unnecessary.Wegulo, Stephen N. Tan Spot of Wheat (2012): n. pag. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension, Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Dec. 2012. Web. There is research to suggest that plant height may also influence the amount of disease able to form due to the pathogen. It suggests that shorter plants will have a lowered chance of infection."The Effect of Plant Height on Tan Spot on Durum Wheat in Southern Saskatchewan." National Center for Biotechnology Information. U.S. National Library of Medicine, n.d. Web. This research has only been conducted in Canada however, and should lead to more research before being used as a control technique.Host resistance
Some resistance genes – especially against races 1 and 5, the most problematic inImportance
This disease is considered to be a very important one. According to the University of Nebraska, losses of 50 percent have been documented. This negatively impacts the profitability a farmer can hope to achieve within one year. Tan spot is recognized as "one of the major constraints of wheat production. This is also a very significant disease in Canada, creating similar yield losses annually. Tan spot is important enough and causing large enough yield losses to continually prompt new research. ''P. t-r.'' has caused serious epidemics in Kazakhstan since the 1980s with nearly half the national harvest being lost when there is an epidemic.References
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