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1.
Phytopathology ; 102(5): 519-27, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22494249

ABSTRACT

We used cover crops with demonstrated efficacy against Verticillium dahliae and Pratylenchus penetrans in combination with the biocidal practice of solarization to determine the importance of targeting both organisms for managing potato early dying, an issue relevant to the search for alternatives to soil fumigation. Two experiments were conducted in commercial fields using a split-plot design with cover crop treatments of rapeseed, marigold, forage pearl millet, sorghum-sudangrass, and corn as the main plot factor and solarization as the subplot factor. Cover crops were grown and solarization applied in year one, followed by potato in year two. The main effect of solarization was significant for reduced inoculum levels of both organisms in year two and increased tuber yields. The main effect of cover crop was also significant with lower population densities of P. penetrans following the marigold and millet treatments and of V. dahliae following rape and sorghum-sudangrass. The cover crop treatments influenced yield in only one of the experiments in the absence of solarization. The combinatorial effect of cover crops and solarization resulted in a wide range of pathogen population densities. Mean soil inoculum levels were negatively related to yield for V. dahliae in experiment 1, and for P. penetrans and the P. penetrans × V. dahliae interaction in both experiments.


Subject(s)
Agriculture/methods , Pest Control/methods , Solanum tuberosum/growth & development , Tylenchoidea/radiation effects , Verticillium/radiation effects , Animals , Biomass , Crops, Agricultural/growth & development , Fertilizers , Fumigation , Light , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Diseases/parasitology , Soil/parasitology , Soil Microbiology , Solanum tuberosum/microbiology , Solanum tuberosum/parasitology , Tylenchoidea/physiology , Verticillium/physiology
2.
J Environ Qual ; 31(4): 1166-73, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12175034

ABSTRACT

Application of manure to frozen and/or snow-covered soils of high-latitude, continental climate regions is associated with enhanced P losses to surface water bodies, but the practice is an essential part of most animal farming systems in these regions. Field experiments of the fates of winter-applied manure P are so difficult as to make them essentially impractical, so a mechanistic, modeling approach is required. Central to a mechanistic understanding of manure P snow-melt runoff is knowledge of snowpack disappearance (ablation) as affected by manure application. The objective of this study was to learn how solid manure applied to snow-covered fields modulates the surface energy balance and thereby snow cover ablation. Manure landspreading experiments were conducted in Arlington, WI during the winters of 1998 and 1999. Solid dairy manure was applied on top of snow at a rate of 70 Mg ha(-1) in 1998, and at 45 and 100 Mg ha(-1) in 1999. Results showed that the manure retarded melt, in proportion to the rate applied. The low-albedo manure increased absorption of shortwave radiation compared with snow, but this extra energy was lost in longwave radiation and turbulent flux of sensible and latent heat. These losses result in significant attenuation of melt peaks, retarding snowmelt. Lower snowmelt rates beneath manure may allow more infiltration of meltwater compared with bare snow. This infiltration and attenuated snowmelt runoff may partially mitigate the enhanced likelihood of P runoff from unincorporated winter-spread manure.


Subject(s)
Manure , Models, Theoretical , Phosphorus/analysis , Snow , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Climate , Phosphorus/chemistry , Seasons , Water Movements , Water Supply
3.
J Environ Qual ; 31(4): 1174-83, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12175035

ABSTRACT

Winter landspreading is an important part of manure management in the U.S. Upper Midwest. Although the practice is thought to lead to excessive P runoff losses, surprisingly little has been learned from field experiments or current water quality models. We captured knowledge gained from winter manure landspreading experiments by modifying a mechanistic snow ablation model to include manure. The physically based, modified model simulated the observed delay in snow cover disappearance and surface energy balance changes caused by application of the manure. Additional model simulations of surface energy balance estimates of radiation and turbulent fluxes showed that during intense melting events the manure on top of snow significantly reduced the energy available for melt of the snow underneath, slowing melt. The effect was most pronounced when snowmelt was driven by both relatively high solar radiation and turbulent heat fluxes. High absorbed shortwave radiation caused significant warming of the manure, which led to substantial losses in turbulent fluxes and longwave radiation. Simulations of snowmelt also showed that manure applications between 45 and 100 Mg ha(-1) significantly reduced peak snowmelt rates, in proportion to the manure applied. Lower snowmelt rates beneath manure may allow more infiltration of meltwater compared with bare snow. This infiltration and attenuated snowmelt runoff may partially mitigate the enhanced likelihood of P runoff from unincorporated winter-spread manure.


Subject(s)
Manure , Models, Theoretical , Phosphorus/analysis , Snow , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Agriculture , Environmental Monitoring , Hot Temperature , Radiation, Ionizing , Seasons , Water Movements
4.
Plant Dis ; 85(9): 1018-1026, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30823085

ABSTRACT

A method for predicting canopy wetness and humidity from remotely-acquired meteorological and radiation data is described. This method employs a surface energy balance model to scale from the above-canopy macroclimate to in-canopy microclimate conditions. Above-canopy temperature, vapor pressure, and wind speed inputs were obtained from objective analyses of hourly measurements from the synoptic weather network, while downwelling long- and shortwave radiation forcings were estimated from standard satellite observations. Precipitation (irrigation + rainfall) was the only input acquired in-field. Model predictions compared well with measurements of nighttime dew accumulation and relative humidity made in irrigated potato crops grown in central Wisconsin. Maximum dew amount measured in full canopies over four nights was reproduced to within 0.05 to 0.1 mm. The practical utility of this method to disease management was assessed by processing modeled and measured canopy microclimate data from two weather stations over three growing seasons through the BLITECAST disease forecasting system. Given the uncertainties inherent in the measurement of humidity, the model reasonably reproduced disease severity values generated from in-situ measurements in all but one case, where the canopy had suffered partial defoliation. Because the model simulates the microclimate within a healthy, uniform canopy, it may in many cases produce more reliable regional forecasts for plant disease than would a single set of in-situ measurements.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 79(3): 891-5, 1985 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16664511

ABSTRACT

A method of measuring the water potential of stored potato tubers (Solanum tuberosum L.) was needed to investigate the relationship of bacterial soft rot in tubers to water potential. Pressure chamber measurements, while useful for tubers with functional stolons, cannot be made on stored tubers. Measurements could be made on excised tissue pieces in a hygrometer chamber and with hygrometers implanted into tubers. We report here our evaluation of these hygrometric methods using a comparison with the pressure chamber on tubers harvested with stolons intact.In tubers of high water potential, measurements on excised tissue were as much as 0.5 megapascals lower than the pressure chamber, probably due to turgor-driven expansion of the sample when freed from constraints imposed by surrounding tissue. Good agreement (+/-0.05 megapascals) was found between the implanted hygrometer and the pressure chamber at potentials higher than -0.5 megapascals. At lower water potentials, both hygrometer measurements were higher than the pressure chamber. Respirational heating of the tissue contributed to the increase in the excised tissue samples, but not with the implanted hygrometers because of the hygrometer design. The osmotic pressure balanced the pressure chamber measurement of potential at -0.7 megapascals, but was too small to do so at lower potentials. At most, 25% of this discrepancy can be accounted for by dilution by apoplastic water. We believe that the pressure chamber measurement is too low at low water potentials and that the error is associated with air bubbles in the xylem. At low potentials air emerged from xylem vessels along with sap, and fewer xylem emitted sap as potentials decreased.

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