Full TGIF Record # 59250
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Web URL(s):https://listings.lib.msu.edu/ksure/1997.pdf#page=29
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http://www.ksre.k-state.edu/historicpublications/pubs/SRP788.pdf#page=29
    Last checked: 11/25/2015
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Publication Type:
i
Report
Author(s):Tisserat, Ned; Pair, John
Author Affiliation:Tisserat: Associate Professor of Plant Pathology, Plant Pathology Extension and Research; Pair: Professor of Horticulture, Horticulture Research Center, Wichita, Kansas State University
Title:Effects of cultivar, fungicide applications, and clipping removal on development of Rhizoctonia brown patch on tall fescue
Section:Pest management and environmental studies: Disease control
Other records with the "Pest management and environmental studies: Disease control" Section
Source:1997 Turfgrass Research [Kansas State University]. May 1997, p. 25-27.
Publishing Information:Manhattan, KS: Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Kansas State University and the Kansas Turfgrass Foundation
# of Pages:3
Series:Report of Progress 788
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Brown patch; Festuca arundinacea; Disease control; Cultivar variation; Clipping management; Fungicide application; Preventive control; Therapeutic control; Flutolanil; Chlorothalonil
Cultivar Names:AFA; Houndog V; Jaguar III; Kentucky 31
Abstract/Contents:A study was conducted to evaluate the effects of cultivar, fungicide program, and clipping management on brown patch control in tall fescue. Four cultivars (AFA, Houndog V, Jaguar 3, and Kentucky-31) were treated with either preventive (Prostar) or curative fungicides (Daconil), and mowed with or without clipping return. "Both preventive monthly fungicide treatments with Prostar and curative treatments with Daconil (three applications) were effective in reducing brown patch in late summer...Although the curative treatments were effective, they did not result in a reduction in the number of fungicide applications. All treatments, including the untreated plots, had very low levels of damaged turf by late September. This suggests that tall fescue can recover from brown patch injury after several weeks (i.e., the turfgrass is not noticeably thinned or killed by the disease). The cultivar Houndog V showed significant damage from Pythium blight on 1 Aug...The disease is not common in Kansas and may have been the result of spring seeding and wet conditions in late June. No significant differences occurred among cultivars in the amount of brown patch at the other sampling dates...Returning clippings to the turf (mulching mower) did not significantly increase the incidence of brown patch at any time of the sampling dates."
Language:English
References:0
Note:Pictures, b/w
Graphs
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Tisserat, N., and J. Pair. 1997. Effects of cultivar, fungicide applications, and clipping removal on development of Rhizoctonia brown patch on tall fescue. Turfgrass Res. p. 25-27.
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Web URL(s):
https://listings.lib.msu.edu/ksure/1997.pdf#page=29
    Last checked: 05/25/2017
    Requires: PDF Reader
    Notes: Item is within a single large file
http://www.ksre.k-state.edu/historicpublications/pubs/SRP788.pdf#page=29
    Last checked: 11/25/2015
    Requires: PDF Reader
    Notes: Item is within a single large file
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MSU catalog number: SB 433.16 .K2 K36
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