Skip to Main Content

Monitor Weather and Potential Risk for Head Scab of Wheat

As we approach flowering time in wheat, it will be the time to spray fungicides to protect wheat from Fusarium Head Blight (FHB), or scab.

The Fusarium Head Blight Prediction Center, housed at Penn State University, produces daily risk maps that indicate low, medium, or high-risk areas for scab development in the Midwest. Find the information at http://www.wheatscab.psu.edu/.

As of May 11, Whitley County was in low- to medium risk of FHB, according to the FHB Prediction Center. The center also includes expert commentary from state specialists. “The updated wheat fungicide efficacy guide is a resource that can provide guidance on fungicide choice for efficacy against FHB and other diseases,” said Dr. Darcy Telenko, Purdue field crops pathologist, in a recent commentary at the site. “It is available on the Crop Protection Network at https://cropprotectionnetwork.org/publications/fungicide-efficacy-for-control-of-wheat-diseases.”

“Rainy, wet conditions will favor many fungal diseases in wheat,” said Telenko in an article for the Purdue Pest & Crop Newsletter.

“During flowering (anthesis) warm, wet weather with high relative humidity will favor the development of Fusarium head blight (scab),” she said. “Fusarium head blight (FHB) is caused by the fungus Fusarium graminearum.” She said that it infects wheat during flowering, beginning at Feekes 10.5.1. Symptoms of FHB will appear as bleached spikelets on the head later in the season. Infection can lead to small or shriveled grain kernels referred to as “tombstones.” In addition to shriveled grain, this fungus can produce mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (DON), which can accumulate in the infected grain.

According to Purdue Extension’s Wheat Field Guide, this fungus survives through the winter in infected corn residue. High humidity and frequent rainfall promote the production and dispersal of spores from residue. The wind can blow spores onto wheat plants. Warm, humid weather promotes infection and secondary spread.

According to the Fusarium Head Blight Prediction Center, the fungus attacks the grain directly and can result in serious yield losses. Symptoms of the disease include tan or brown-colored lesions that may include single spikelets or large sections of the wheat head.

Flowering dates will generally occur chronologically from southern Indiana to northern Indiana. Feekes 10 is the general term for the boot stage of wheat, where the developing grain head swells and is visible in the leaf sheath directly below the flag leaf. The further decimals refer to various sequential growth stages of wheat. Feekes 10.5.1 refers to the beginning flowering growth stage of wheat. Purdue Extension publication ID-448, “Wheat Field Guide,” describes these stages:

*10.1 – awns visible, grain heads emerging

*10.3 – heading half complete

*10.5 – heading complete

*10.5.1 – beginning flowering (at this growth stage, pollen-containing anthers are visible on the wheat head)

*10.5.3 – flowering and pollination complete

“A fungicide application might be considered if a Fusarium head blight (FHB) susceptible variety is planted, or if you are worried about scab on your farm,” said Telenko. “These applications should be made at Feekes 10.5.1, or early flowering to suppress FHB.”

More information is available by accessing the free publications, Managing Wheat by Growth Stage, ID-422-W, and Fusarium Head Blight (Head Scab), BP-33-W, available online at Purdue Extension’s Education Store, at www.edustore.purdue.edu.

Find the article (from 2022) Keeping an Eye On Foliar Diseases Of Wheat And Fusarium Head Blight Risk referenced above by Telenko in the Purdue Plant & Pest newsletter: https://extension.entm.purdue.edu/newsletters/pestandcrop/.

To Top