Stripe rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, has been observed frequently on wheat since 2010 in Saskatchewan. The deployment of resistant cultivars and the use of fungicides are common control measures for this disease. The effectiveness of fungicide application at various timings on wheat cultivars varying in resistance to the disease at two seeding dates was determined in central Saskatchewan from 2012 to 2016. Under high disease pressure, a single fungicide application at mid-anthesis growth stage of wheat seeded mid-May decreased disease severity of the susceptible cultivar ‘AC Barrie’ from 87% (unsprayed control) to 26% and protected yield by 59%. The response was somewhat less dramatic for the moderately resistant cultivar ‘CDC Imagine’; stripe rust severity was reduced from 54% to 14%, and yield protected by 32%. Similar effects of fungicide application were observed for thousand kernel weight, test weight and protein content. Furthermore, at a later seeding date (early June), fungicide application at stem elongation reduced stripe rust severity on the susceptible cultivar ‘AC Barrie’ from 87% to 51% and protected yield by 53%. Fungicide applied at the mid-anthesis stage had the same positive effect, reducing symptoms from 87% to 54% and increasing yield by 46%. Fungicide application had no detectable effect on stripe rust severity of the resistant cultivar ‘Lillian’ at any growth stage of either seeding date experiment. The study demonstrated that, under the conditions that prevail in Saskatchewan, a single fungicide application at stem elongation or mid-anthesis, depending on seeding date, can reduce disease severity, protect yield and improve grain quality in wheat cultivars susceptible and moderately resistant to stripe rust.
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