Abstract

Fungicides are widely used to reduce Fusarium infections and grain contamination by mycotoxins and increase the yield in cereals, but the efficacy of fungicide treatments in varying climates has not been systematically explored. Field experiments with Estonian spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cv. ‘Maali’ were carried out in three successive years 2012–2014 with strongly varying weather conditions to study the effects of three fungicides, Folicur (active ingredient tebuconazole), Falcon Forte (prothioconazole, tebuconazole, spiroxamine) and Archer Top (fenpropidin, propiconazole), on the yield, incidence of Fusarium spp. and on the contamination of grain with mycotoxins DON, HT-2 and T-2. The fungicides were sprayed once a year at spring barley flowering time. The weather conditions during the three years of study were extremely different. The content of cycotoxin DON, HT2 and T2 was low. The spraying with fungicides had not a clear effect on the barley yield and 1 000 kernel weight, and the study year was primarily the main factor that affected barley yield (p<0.05) and 1 000 kernel weight (p<0.05). The impact of year together with fungicide treatment had a significant effect on the incidence of Fusarium spp. (p<0.05) and on the incidence of mycotoxin DON in barley kernels (p<0.001), but did not have a clear effect on the incidence of mycotoxins HT2 and T2.

Highlights

  • Spring barley is the most widely grown spring cereal crop in Estonia

  • In a three-year field experiment,we studied the effect of fungicide application at flowering time in spring barley on the yield, 1000 kernel weight, incidence of Fusarium fungi and mycotoxins DON, HT-2 and T-2

  • Three-year average results showed that the effectiveness of fungicides to reduce Fusarium fungi and to prevent the grain contamination with mycotoxins varied from year to year

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Summary

Introduction

Spring barley is the most widely grown spring cereal crop in Estonia. In 2016–2018 the spring barley growing area was 36% of all cereal crops growing area and 56% of the spring cereals area (Statistics Estonia, 2019). Spring barley for Estonia is an economically important crop since, in 2006, 63% of barley grain was exported. In 2016 in Estonia, 36% spring barley was used as animal feed, 5% as seed and 0.3% of barley was used for human consumption (Statistics Estonia, 2016). 2% of globally produced barley is used directly as human food, 25% is used for malting and brewery industry and the main part of the barley is used for animal feed (Baik and Ullrich, 2008).

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