Abstract

Growing acreage and changing consumer preferences cause increasing interest in the cereal products originating from organic farming. Lack of results of objective test, however, does not allow drawing conclusions about the effects of cultivation in the organic system and comparison to currently preferred conventional system. Field experiment was conducted in organic and conventional fields. Thirty modern cultivars of winter wheat were sown. They were characterized for disease infection including Fusarium head blight, seed sowing value, the amount of DNA of the six species of Fusarium fungi as well as concentration of ergosterol and trichothecenes in grain. The intensity Fusarium head blight was at a similar level in both systems. However, Fusarium colonization of kernels expressed as ergosterol level or DNA concentration was higher for the organic system. It did not reflect in an increased accumulation of trichothecenes in grain, which was similar in both systems, but sowing value of organically produced seeds was lower. Significant differences between analyzed cropping systems and experimental variants were found. The selection of the individual cultivars for organic growing in terms of resistance to diseases and contamination of grain with Fusarium toxins was possible. Effects of organic growing differ significantly from the conventional and grain obtained such way can be recommended to consumers. There are indications for use of particular cultivars bred for conventional agriculture in the case of organic farming, and the growing organic decreases plant stress resulting from intense fertilization and chemical plant protection.

Highlights

  • A way of growing crops is changing because of the geopolitical situation and consumer preferences

  • The constantly increasing acreage crops grown in this system and fast increasing percentage of consumers interested in obtaining the organic food encouraged a detailed address of this issue, which, so far, was recognized only partially

  • It was decided to provide field experiment for a representative sample of winter wheat cultivars for both systems of crops growing-conventional and organic under the same environmental conditions

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Summary

Introduction

A way of growing crops is changing because of the geopolitical situation and consumer preferences. In Poland in 2016 it was 536.6 thousand ha (3.7% of all agricultural land) [1] This is due to the awareness that in organic farming practices the use of artificial fertilizers as well as pesticides is not allowed. Seed transmitted diseases are considered the most harmful in organic farming. Leaf diseases (not seed transmitted) and foot rots are less important Severity of these diseases correlates with high nitrogen doses and high crop density, so under organic farming conditions they are less damaging [4]. Diseases caused by fungi surviving on crop debris (including Fusarium head blight) can be controlled by cultural practices, so they are less damaging than seed borne ones [3]. Fusarium fungi causing Fusarium head blight are able to produce toxic secondary metabolites–mycotoxins contaminating grain. Fusarium spp. affecting cereals are known as potent producers of type A trichothecenes (T-2 and HT-2 toxins, diacetoxyscirpenol et al.) and of type B (deoxynivalenol, nivalenol et al.) as well as moniliformin, zearalenone, enniatins, beauvericin, and the other toxins [5,6,10]

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