A fungus that can infect an entire grass playing surface within 48 hours: Gray leaf spot. What does it do and how to prevent it? In this report we’ll dive into it.
Extreme droughts, extreme temperatures and a short transition period can cause a lot of stress to the plant (and the groundsmen). These are conditions in which diseases thrive, creating a situation that keeps us up at night. But luckily there is a lot we can do to put our mind and our pitch at ease. Naturally, some practices vary depending on the type of disease. A fungus that can infect an entire grass playing surface within 48 hours: gray leaf spot. What does it do and how to prevent it?
When there is a combination of a continuous period of leaf wetness and high temperatures the risk of infection is high. The temperature range in which gray leaf spot can occur is 15-39 °C. At suboptimal temperatures (15-22 °C or 32-39 °C), a period of 21 to 36 hours of leaf wetness is typically required for infection. At optimal temperatures (22-32 °C), peak infection can occur with as little as 9 hours of continuous leaf moisture.
The optimal temperature for gray leaf spot makes that it is historically a grass disease found in places with warm climates such as Middle America and Southern Europe. However, because of global warming and the disease’s ability to adapt to new environments, in the last couple of years gray leaf spot has been more and more prevalent in Nothern Europe as well.
In cool-season turfgrasses symptoms first appear as small, water-soaked lesions, which quickly become necrotic. The leaf spots can vary considerably in color, size and shape, but they are often:
– Oblong
– Gray to light brown
– Surrounded by purple to dark brown borders
In warm-season turfgrasses, tiny, brown lesions on leaves and stems enlarge rapidly into round to oblong spots. The largest spots may extend almost across the entire leaf. In severe cases, the entire planting dies, leaving behind resistant grass species or weeds. Leaf spots are tan to gray and have purple to brown borders. In both cool seasons and warm season turfgrasses, Blighted leaf tips often have a conspicuous twisted or fishhook shape and thick masses of grayish spores may give leaves a feltlike appearance. Lesions are also found on the leaf sheaths, spikes and stems. Under a microscope gray leaf spot spores are easily to recognize, since they have a distinctive pyriform shape and a glassy appearance.
Initially, the fungal spores must be present on the grass in order to be able to infect. Spores often come from previous infections, from water, machines and from people. Avoiding fungal spores on your grass is nearly impossible. The spore itself does not pose a real threat to your grass at first; the plant’s immune system is the main factor. The immune system of a grass plant can easily be compared to that of a human being, both of which are highly developed. If a person is too cold or too hot, he or she automatically goes into shock and becomes more susceptible to disease. The same applies to plants. Extremely dry, wet, warm or very cold conditions force the grass plant to go into “survival mode”. As a result, the grass draws nutrients from its defense system in order to survive, and therefore becomes more vulnerable. This is also known as “grass stress” and is regularly part of the cause for infection of the plant.
The application of fungicide is still the most effective control method to treat gray leaf spot. However, fungicide usage is dealing with tigthening regulations, highlighting the urgency for a more sustainable strategy. Therefore, UVC technology offers the most environmental friendly and effective alternative. If it turns out your grass is infected with gray leaf spot, curative treatment with the UVC180 will help to reduce disease spread. As mentioned earlier, UVC light has the ability to disrupt the DNA of fungal spores, such as gray leaf spot, preventing the fungus from reproducing. Because grass cells are much more resistant to UVC light than fungal cells, the amount of UVC light radiated by the UVC180 is high enough to kill the fungi and to combat further outbreaks, while the grass plant is not affected. Another option is to slightly reduce the height of cut in the areas where the first signs of gray leaf spot are visible.
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