3.1. Effect of Fungicides on FHB
From the data from years 2000-2004 where four fungicide treatments were selected (T125 + P125, T250, T133, and C300), to test against four
Fusarium isolates (44Fg, 12377Fc, 12375Fc, and 12551Fc), on three different wheat cultivars (Zugoly-FHB susceptible, Sámán-FHB MS, and Bence-FHB MR), the visual disease assessment data had a similar pattern to FDK (
Table 4) and DON (
Table 5). P125 + T125 showed 0.87% visual infection severity, T250 showed 1.51%, T133 showed 2.23%, while the fungicide-free control was at 17.5%, on average of the three cultivars. The least significant difference at 5% (LSD 5%) was 0.59,
i.e., all fungicides differed in their capacity to decrease FHB. However, the T125 + P125 treatment was significantly more effective than tebuconazole alone. In efficacy or reduction of symptoms (severity of disease) the numbers were: 95, 91, 87 and 47%, for P125 + T125, T250, T133 and C300, respectively. The LSD 5% was 1.7%. The efficacy varies between 89 and 98% for the best fungicides in the different epidemic situations, and 9.8-63% for the least effective (carbendazim). The three cultivars differed in response, as the best efficacy was measured on the most susceptible cultivar, Zugoly, and the least efficacy on the more resistant cultivars.
In the analysis of the overall mean effect of fungicides on FDK values (
Table 4), the non-sprayed and inoculated controls had 25.2% FDK, P125 + T125 had 2.1%, T250 had 4.3%, T133 had 5.6%, and the C300 fungicide had 12.58% across years, isolates and cultivars. Accordingly, the reduction was high, and we saw 91.7% efficacy for P125 + T125, 82.9% efficacy for T250, 77.6% efficacy for T133, and only 49.2% for C300. The LSD 5% value was 3.6%. Interestingly, for the more resistant cultivar Bence, the efficacy data for almost all fungicides were lower than that found for the more
Fusarium susceptible cultivars of Sámán and Zugoly. The data varied much less for the most effective than the least effective fungicide. All fungicides differed significantly from each other.
Table 4.
Effect of fungicides against FHB in wheat: Fusarium damaged kernels (FDK) (% of scabby grains) in three cultivars tested during 2000-2004.
Table 4.
Effect of fungicides against FHB in wheat: Fusarium damaged kernels (FDK) (% of scabby grains) in three cultivars tested during 2000-2004.
Fungicides | Zugoly (S) | Sámán (MS) | Bence (MR) |
---|
a.i. g/ha | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean |
---|
P*125 + T125. | 2.4 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 3.3 | 1.7 | 1.5 | 1.1 | 1.2 | 7.4 | 2.8 | 1.7 | 1.0 | 1.2 | 3.6 | 1.9 |
T250 | 7.3 | 3.6 | 2.3 | 7.2 | 5.1 | 2.6 | 1.7 | 1.0 | 11.4 | 4.2 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 2.6 | 7.9 | 3.7 |
T133 | 8.2 | 2.4 | 1.7 | 13.4 | 6.4 | 8.8 | 3.7 | 2.5 | 13.5 | 7.1 | 2.8 | 1.0 | 2.4 | 7.4 | 3.4 |
C300 | 22.3 | 13.5 | 13.1 | 28.8 | 19.4 | 13.6 | 4.9 | 6.8 | 17.2 | 10.6 | 5.7 | 4.2 | 5.9 | 17.5 | 8.3 |
Fusarium check | 39.2 | 30.6 | 32.7 | 39.2 | 35.4 | 31.6 | 17.9 | 15.3 | 39.6 | 26.1 | 16.3 | 7.7 | 11.7 | 20.9 | 14.1 |
Table 5.
Effect of fungicides against FHB in wheat. DON contamination in mg kg−1 on three cultivars during 2000-2004.
Table 5.
Effect of fungicides against FHB in wheat. DON contamination in mg kg−1 on three cultivars during 2000-2004.
Fungicides | Zugoly (S) | Sámán (MS) | Bence (MR) |
---|
a.i. g/ha | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean | 44Fg | 12377Fg | 12375Fc | 12551Fc | Mean |
---|
P*125 + T125. | 2.0 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 2.7 | 1.6 | 1.2 | 0.3 | 0.4 | 3.3 | 1.3 | 2.2 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 1.6 | 1.3 |
T250 | 4.4 | 2.2 | 1.4 | 2.7 | 2.7 | 2.6 | 1.4 | 0.7 | 6.6 | 2.8 | 5.5 | 1.1 | 2.4 | 3.8 | 3.2 |
T133 | 6.5 | 1.5 | 1.6 | 6.8 | 4.1 | 4.2 | 2.0 | 1.5 | 7.2 | 3.7 | 4.0 | 0.8 | 1.9 | 3.1 | 2.4 |
C300 | 8.9 | 5.6 | 6.5 | 13.3 | 8.6 | 9.1 | 1.5 | 3.3 | 9.5 | 5.9 | 5.9 | 1.8 | 3.8 | 7.3 | 4.7 |
UTC + Fusarium | 21.6 | 12.5 | 32.7 | 27.1 | 23.4 | 26.0 | 25.4 | 13.2 | 24.7 | 22.3 | 13.6 | 5.1 | 7.1 | 13.9 | 9.9 |
The DON level data (
Table 5) are the most important as acceptability of grain is based on whether DON levels are under the food safety limit for tolerable level. The P125 + T125 treatment lowered the toxin contamination below the acceptable limit in seven cases, according to European standards, and in nine cases for the U.S. standard. For T250 treatment, two cases met the European standards, and four the U.S. standard. The difference between P125 + T125 and T250 treatments is significant. T133 reduced the DON level in 1 (European std.) and 6 (U.S. std.) cases , and carbendazim reduced the DON level below the U.S. in only 2 cases. The efficacies of fungicides on DON reduction showed that P125 + T125 varied between 84.1% and 98.7%, depending on the strain of fungus and the cultivar of wheat, with an overall mean of 92.4%. T250 gave slightly better results than T133, but the difference was not significant. C300 results varied from 46.2 and 94% with a mean 65.6%. As with the results from the severity of disease and the FDK analysis, fungicide efficacy on DON reduction was greater in the more FHB susceptible wheat cultivars (82-85%) than on the more resistant cultivar (66%).
The yield data showed the same tendencies as we saw for FDK and DON, but the efficacies were much lower (data not shown).
An ANOVA presents the mean square (MS) values for the analyses (
Table 6) to show any and all main effects and interactions of the fungicides on FHB occurrence, FDK, and DON, when considering the variables of the years, the wheat cultivars, and the fungal isolates. It is apparent that the fungicide treatment has the most significant effect on FHB, FDK, and DON, regardless of the year, the fungal isolate used, or the wheat cultivar. So the fungicide activity can be reproduced well under very different epidemiological conditions.
Table 6.
Mean Square (MS) values for ANOVAs of the traits tested in the fungicide trials 2000-2004.
Table 6.
Mean Square (MS) values for ANOVAs of the traits tested in the fungicide trials 2000-2004.
Source of Variance | df | MS Values |
---|
FHB | FDK | df (DON) | DON |
---|
Fungicide A | 4 | 9192.3 *** | 33659.3 *** | 4 | 6977.1 *** |
Year B | 4 | 1271.1 *** | 933.3 *** | 3 | 1587.9 *** |
Isolate C | 3 | 1857.1 *** | 12161.8 *** | 3 | 879.9 *** |
Cultivar D | 2 | 381.9 *** | 3369.5 *** | 2 | 934.6 *** |
AxB | 16 | 403.3 *** | 102.3 ns | 12 | 556.3 *** |
AxC | 12 | 484.0 *** | 2410.4 *** | 12 | 46.3 ns |
AxD | 8 | 320.4 *** | 2722.5 *** | 8 | 502.3 *** |
BxC | 12 | 1160.4 *** | 2316.5 *** | 9 | 1527.9 *** |
BxD | 8 | 1891.5 *** | 1639.8 *** | 6 | 712.3 *** |
CxD | 6 | 96.4 *** | 4404.6 *** | 6 | 127.6 *** |
AxBxC | 48 | 240.2 *** | 688.0 ** | 36 | 279.5 *** |
AxBxD | 32 | 431.1 *** | 536.5 ** | 24 | 841.6 *** |
AxCxD | 24 | 30.5 ** | 696.1 ** | 24 | 132.7 *** |
BxCxD | 24 | 362.0 *** | 1414.9 *** | 18 | 250.5 *** |
AxBxCxD | 96 | 90.7 *** | 825.0 *** | 72 | 146.4 *** |
Within | 600 | 16.2 | 297.9 | 480 | 25.3 |
The correlation coefficient between FHB and FDK is r = 0.9671, for FHB-DON, r = 0.9521, and for FDK-DON, r = 0.9656; all are significant at P = 0.001. The very close correlations tell clearly that the fungicide effect decreases not only the FHB symptoms but also the other measured parameters like DON and FDK. Of course, when individual data are examined and not the general means, the correlations are less close. For example, a correlation between FDK and DON was r = 0.7697, n = 725, significant at P = 0.001. This means that the correlation, even if it is reduced by 0.2, is close enough to have good predictive value in the given experiment. However, this does not mean that FDK can predict the levels of DON produced under different conditions. Therefore, an exact analytical method is needed to verify the quantity of toxin contamination in all cases in question.
3.2. Stability Tests
For a fungicide to be useful for any farmer, it should be effective under any environmental conditions, upon any wheat cultivar, and against any Fusarium species. Our experimental conditions were set up for just such a stability analysis. We found that the lowest slope of the regression analyses for FHB was b = 0.064 under the fungicidal treatment of P125 + T125. For T250 the slope was 0.1010, for T133 it was 0.131, and for C300 it was 0.6199. The stability for this trait in P125 + T125 was ten times better than for C300. For FDK the best slope was 0.09 for P125 + T125 while the worst was 0.606 for C300. This is again a 10-fold difference between slopes. For DON, P125 + T125 had a slope of 0.019 and C300 had 0.182, again a 10-fold difference.
The FDK data from the 60 individual epidemic situations clearly show that fungicide treatment using P125 + T125 was usually highly effective, however, in some cases it produced only moderate control. Again, C300 was not very effective when there was a high disease level in the non-treated check.
The stability data for FDK was very similar to that of DON. When disease severity was high and DON levels of up to 10 mg kg
−1 were detected in the
Fusarium check, fungicide treatments of P125 + T125 satisfactorily controlled the levels of DON (
Figure 2). When individual samples were analyzed, several samples from fungicide treated heads surpassed the 2 mg kg
−1 value, but there were many more examples for excellent control. When DON levels above 10 mg kg
−1 were detected in the
Fusarium checks, the fungicide control was not able to reduce the DON levels below the 2 mg kg
−1 level, even though the reduction may have exceeded 80-90%. Tebuconazole 250 had lower performance, with maximum values of DON in fungicide-controlled samples of 20 mg kg
−1, which was four times more than the P125 + T125 treatment. For T133, the maximum level of DON was 25 mg kg
−1, however, at lower epidemic severities, the control was satisfactory. Carbendazim (C300) gave satisfactory control for DON contamination only in cases of low disease severity; otherwise the control was far from sufficient.
Figure 2.
Stability of fungicides for controlling deoxynivalenol (DON) contamination, data: mg kg−1. Data: four years *three cultivars* four isolates (=48 epidemic situations). Data of the Fusarium inoculated but not fungicide treated controls (X axis) were plotted against the data of the four fungicides tested (Y axis). (Commercial names: (A) Prosaro; (B) Folicur; (C) Falcon; (D) Kolfugo).
Figure 2.
Stability of fungicides for controlling deoxynivalenol (DON) contamination, data: mg kg−1. Data: four years *three cultivars* four isolates (=48 epidemic situations). Data of the Fusarium inoculated but not fungicide treated controls (X axis) were plotted against the data of the four fungicides tested (Y axis). (Commercial names: (A) Prosaro; (B) Folicur; (C) Falcon; (D) Kolfugo).
3.4. Small and Large Plot Comparisons
In small plot experiments run during 2006-2008, FHB data showed a significant reduction of symptom severity when fungicides were applied (data not shown). For the more resistant cultivar, Petur, the best fungicide (P125 + T125) reduced FHB severity to 1% or lower compared to the untreated controls which ranged from 2.9% (low disease) to 33% (high disease). The moderately sensitive cultivar Kapos also had reduced FHB levels that were near the Hungarian regulatory levels of 2% or lower even under medium to high levels of disease when P125 + T125 was used (check range 4.7-34%). When P125 + T125 was applied to the susceptible cultivar Miska, the FHB values were 4-8% compared to the check value 15-60%. This reflected an eight fold higher disease level than the mean values of Petur under the same fungicide treatment. The FDK values from the small plot analyses presented a similar picture. At high epidemic severity, the FDK levels in Petur were decreased from 53% in the controls to 2.3%, while in Miska, the levels were decreased from 66% in the controls to 10%, when using P125 + T125 treatment. The less effective fungicides, e.g., Pro125 + CC40 and TET125, showed much lower reduction in FDK values (data not shown).
Table 8.
Small plot fungicide control of Fusarium head blight in wheat. DON contamination mg kg−1 during two low, one medium, and one high epidemic.
Table 8.
Small plot fungicide control of Fusarium head blight in wheat. DON contamination mg kg−1 during two low, one medium, and one high epidemic.
Fungicide | Petur (MR) | Miska (S) | Kapos (MS) |
---|
Low | Low | Medium | High | UTC | Mean | Low | Low | Medium | High | UTC | Mean | Low | Low | Medium | High | UTC | Mean |
---|
P125 + T125 | 0.19 | 1.74 | 1.96 | 7.65 | 0.38 | 2.38 | 2.29 | 2.25 | 8.64 | 7.90 | 0.42 | 4.30 | 1.44 | 1.95 | 9.29 | 5.75 | 1.30 | 3.95 |
T133 | 0.63 | 1.19 | 3.31 | 9.62 | 0.40 | 3.03 | 11.63 | 9.22 | 29.63 | 33.92 | 1.87 | 17.25 | 8.10 | 11.07 | 63.17 | 45.07 | 0.81 | 25.64 |
P125 + T125 | 3.09 | 1.25 | 8.75 | 16.53 | 0.57 | 6.04 | 13.24 | 7.57 | 35.86 | 40.30 | 0.81 | 19.56 | 6.56 | 10.03 | 45.66 | 38.60 | 4.09 | 20.99 |
T133 | 1.54 | 0.85 | 4.96 | 18.78 | 0.51 | 5.33 | 9.30 | 10.62 | 36.73 | 42.93 | 1.69 | 20.26 | 11.26 | 12.89 | 55.39 | 38.42 | 0.75 | 23.74 |
EP125 + K125 | 2.56 | 1.70 | 11.00 | 19.55 | 0.39 | 7.04 | 10.98 | 8.29 | 41.24 | 35.80 | 1.06 | 19.47 | 8.43 | 12.82 | 43.99 | 51.44 | 1.44 | 23.62 |
EP84 + F250 | 3.99 | 3.52 | 12.13 | 21.48 | 0.89 | 8.40 | 14.91 | 10.77 | 30.10 | 45.67 | 1.16 | 20.52 | 9.39 | 14.47 | 49.01 | 44.93 | 1.07 | 23.77 |
Pro125 + CC40 | 4.11 | 2.83 | 14.31 | 26.07 | 0.98 | 9.66 | 15.08 | 7.44 | 43.51 | 59.22 | 1.75 | 25.40 | 5.44 | 12.65 | 64.74 | 54.37 | 1.12 | 27.66 |
TET125 | 4.32 | 3.82 | 15.02 | 26.15 | 1.34 | 10.13 | 13.24 | 11.59 | 49.36 | 55.41 | 1.36 | 26.19 | 8.27 | 13.57 | 75.36 | 68.47 | 1.38 | 33.41 |
UTC +
Fusarium | 4.54 | 2.15 | 13.07 | 41.44 | 1.14 | 12.47 | 19.84 | 14.33 | 74.88 | 73.92 | 2.30 | 37.06 | 13.30 | 10.74 | 111.78 | 70.49 | 1.12 | 41.49 |
The data on the DON levels are perhaps the most important (
Table 8) as trade is regulated by this trait. It seems that an acceptable fungicide control is not possible when natural infections cause a DON level above 10 mg kg
−1. For an example, using the MR cultivar Petur under environmental conditions that produced high levels of disease, DON concentrations averaged 41 mg kg
−1 in the untreated controls while P125 + T125-treated wheat had DON concentrations averaging 8 mg kg
−1. While the reduction in DON levels was 80%, the remaining levels were still too high to be acceptable for trade. Although FDK and DON levels had a correlation of
r = 0.81 at
n = 108, significant at
P = 0.001,
we found that a direct forecasting of the DON via FDK was not possible. We found, for example,
an FDK level of 0.11% had a DON level of 1.74 mg kg
−1 DON, while an FDK level of 0.54% had a DON level of 3.52 mg kg
−1. Samples with an FDK level lower than 2% contained DON levels from 0.19–3.99 mg kg
−1. An FDK of 20% may occur with a DON contamination between 7 and 62 mg kg
−1. The variety resistance actually influences the success of the fungicide significantly. On the more resistant cultivar Petur, all fungicides performed better than on the more susceptible cultivars. The data show, however, that if the DON level is not higher than about 10 mg kg
−1 in the non-sprayed and
Fusarium infected control, fungicide treatment can decrease the DON level to the legal limit or lower.
There was a significant influence of environmental conditions on the 3 year small plot/large farm plot experiments. 2006 and 2007 were rather dry, and the DON levels were about 50% less than the FDK levels. In the very wet year of 2008 the situation changed and there were high levels of disease. The amount of FHB and FDK doubled from the mean of 2006 and 2007, while the DON contamination increased 10-fold (
Table 9). This latter was highly sensitive to late rains.
Table 9.
Comparison of FHB, FDK and DON values in the small plot fungicide tests 2006-2008. Data: means across isolates, fungicides and cultivars.
Table 9.
Comparison of FHB, FDK and DON values in the small plot fungicide tests 2006-2008. Data: means across isolates, fungicides and cultivars.
Year | FHB Severity% | %FDK | DON mg kg−1 |
---|
2006 | 7.63 | 9.22 | 3.82 |
2007 | 3.99 | 8.69 | 4.93 |
2008 | 13.75 | 19.63 | 44.44 |
Mean | 8.46 | 12.51 | 17.73 |
It is important to determine whether a fungicide has similar efficacy on various traits (FHB, FDK, DON) under different environmental conditions. We found that, once again, P125 + T125 was the best treatment with 88% reduction in all traits measured during the 3 year study. ANOVA showed results very similar to that of the
Table 5 of Exp. 1 (results/data not shown).
The FHB incidence data of the farm scale experiment (
Table 10) shows clear fungicide differences on the different cultivars using different spray nozzles for fungicide application. As the farm plots were not artificially inoculated with
Fusarium strains, the level of disease was caused only by naturally occurring
Fusarium strains and subjected to natural environmental conditions. This resulted in relatively low levels of FHB over the 3 years. The
Fusarium check controls showed FHB incidence of 6 infected heads/m
2 for cultivar Petur, 10 infected heads/m
2 for cultivar Kapos, and 16 heads/m
2 for cultivar Miska. The best fungicide, Prosaro 1.0 (P125 + T125), reduced the FHB incidence by 90% or more regardless of the resistance of the cultivar or the type of nozzle used. However, the Turbo FloodJet nozzle consistently reduced the FHB incidence better than the TeeJet XR nozzle, with the percentage decrease differing for each cultivar and for each fungicide. The ANOVA showed highly significant fungicide and nozzle differences at
P = 0.001.
Table 10.
FHB incidence (infected head/m2) of the farm scale fungicide test across years 2006-2008.
Table 10.
FHB incidence (infected head/m2) of the farm scale fungicide test across years 2006-2008.
Treatment | Petur | Miska | Kapos |
---|
Teejet XR | Turbo FloodJet | TeeJet XR | Turbo FloodJet | TeeJet XR | Turbo FloodJet |
---|
P125 + T125 | 0.37 | 0.07 | 2.13 | 1.00 | 1.37 | 0.93 |
T133 | 0.63 | 0.30 | 5.77 | 3.63 | 3.67 | 2.13 |
C300 + P120 | 4.37 | 0.70 | 6.23 | 4.47 | 4.70 | 2.70 |
EP125 + K125 | 1.30 | 0.97 | 7.33 | 5.37 | 5.00 | 3.60 |
EP84 + F250 | 2.43 | 1.00 | 8.67 | 6.17 | 6.97 | 3.10 |
Pro125 + CC40 | 1.70 | 1.53 | 8.60 | 6.87 | 6.23 | 4.80 |
AX200 + CC80 | 2.23 | 1.47 | 9.37 | 6.63 | 7.17 | 5.57 |
TET125 | 2.57 | 1.07 | 13.33 | 11.00 | 8.33 | 6.43 |
UTC
Fusarium natural | 5.87 | 5.87 | 15.73 | 15.73 | 10.40 | 10.40 |
Table 11.
DON (mgkg−1)data of the farm scale tests of FHB control by fungicides in wheat, 2006-2008.
Table 11.
DON (mgkg−1)data of the farm scale tests of FHB control by fungicides in wheat, 2006-2008.
Treatment | Petur | Miska | | Kapos | |
---|
TeeJet XR | Turbo FloodJet | TeeJet XR | Turbo FloodJet | TeeJet XR | Turbo FloodJet |
---|
P125 + T125 | 0.06 | 0.00 | 0.63 | 0.31 | 0.33 | 0.40 |
T133 | 0.22 | 0.06 | 1.08 | 0.90 | 0.74 | 0.00 |
C300 + P120 | 0.23 | 0.07 | 1.35 | 0.58 | 0.73 | 0.34 |
AX200 + CC80) | 0.31 | 0.08 | 0.89 | 0.61 | 1.09 | 0.58 |
EP125 + K125) | 0.06 | 0.06 | 1.42 | 0.72 | 1.48 | 0.67 |
Pro125 + CC40 | 0.22 | 0.09 | 1.65 | 0.65 | 1.37 | 0.75 |
EP84 + F250 | 0.19 | 0.00 | 1.40 | 0.97 | 1.73 | 0.60 |
TET125 | 0.14 | 0.08 | 1.07 | 1.23 | 2.10 | 0.35 |
UTC | 0.43 | 0.43 | 1.84 | 1.84 | 1.02 | 1.02 |
Although the FDK numbers were low in the
Fusarium checks and there was no significant difference in FDK between the TeeJet XR or Turbo FloodJet nozzle applications, the fungicides that were applied did have differing effects on FDK. The most effective fungicides, P125 + T125 and T133, reduced FDK numbers by 79 and 84% respectively. The levels of DON detected in the grain (
Table 11) showed a very similar picture to what we have seen before. In the more resistant cultivar Petur, the untreated control (UTC) had 0.43 mg kg
−1 DON, far under the EU limit of 1.25 mg kg
−1, and treatment by any fungicide, regardless of the nozzle type of application, reduced the DON levels below the UTC. In the sensitive cultivar of Miska, the checks showed 1.84 mg kg
−1, and the traditional nozzle, although lowering the DON levels slightly, could not consistently reduce DON levels to under 1.25 mg kg
−1 while the Turbo FloodJet mozzle could. In cultivar Kapos, the UTC had DON levels of 1.0, and the DON levels for various fungicide treatments varied. The TeeJet XR nozzle did not reduce the DON levels as much as did the Turbo FloodJet, except for the P125 + T125 treatment which had the same levels of DON. Overall, the Turbo FloodJet nozzle provided generally better reduction in DON than the TeeJet XR nozzle.
Use of the water sensitive strips showed the type of coverage on the wheat heads by each type of nozzle (
Figure 3). Use of the TeeJet XR showed that the front of the head had the best coverage (35%), the sides less, and the rear, the lowest value (8%). Use of the Turbo TeeJet resulted in a significant increase in coverage, as the front had 52% while the rear had 22%. In the UV light test, the mean coverage of the TeeJet XR was 12% while the mean coverage by the Turbo FloodJet was 27%.
Figure 3.
Coverage of the ears by fungicides using different nozzle types as measured by water sensitive paper stripes across three cultivars, 2007-2008.
Figure 3.
Coverage of the ears by fungicides using different nozzle types as measured by water sensitive paper stripes across three cultivars, 2007-2008.
The DON data from the artificial small plot and natural farm scale tests were also compared using the general means of the fungicides, which show the basic trend. As the results were similar to the different traits, we present only the DON data (
Figure 4). The correlation between the two series is 0.94, significant at
P = 0.001. P125 + T125 had 88% reduction in DON in the small plot test, while the farm scale test showed 73%. The least effective fungicide caused only 23% reduction in both experimental versions. The small plot efficacy data correlated with the large scale trial data, differing by only about 10%. A comparison between the DON data from artificial infection and that from natural infection from the various fungicides and across cultivars showed more variation with a correlation coefficient of
r = 0.7079 (
n = 27,
P = 0.001).
Figure 4.
DON data (mg kg−1) for the fungicides in the small plot artificial and farm scale natural general means across all variables, (n = 9), 2006-2008.
Figure 4.
DON data (mg kg−1) for the fungicides in the small plot artificial and farm scale natural general means across all variables, (n = 9), 2006-2008.