Blog

  • Actuality: One Reason not to Plant Unsolicited Seeds from Unknown Sources

    United States Department of Agriculture

    Jacob Barney, invasive plant expert at Virginia Tech University, giving one of several reasons why we should not plant seeds that show up at our door unsolicited from unknown sources.

  • UF/IFAS to Host Vegetable Growers Meeting

    The University of Florida/IFAS will host a vegetable growers meeting on Aug. 20 from 10 a.m. to noon. It will be a virtual meeting and feature talks from Extension agents and specialists.

    Extension agent Craig Fey will discuss fundamentals of weed management and focus on principles such as exclusion, prevention, cultural and chemical strategies.

    UF/IFAS weed scientist Ramdas Kanissery will talk about managing difficult weeds in vegetables. Nathan Boyd, UF/IFAS weed scientist, will talk about weed management programs for plasticulture vegetables, focusing on cover crops, fumigants and herbicides. Calvin Odero, UF/IFAS Associate Professor in agronomy with a specialty in weed science, will focus on weed management in sweet corn.

    Yiannis Amptazidis, UF/IFAS Assistant Professor in Precision Agriculture and Smart Machines, will present smart technologies for precision weed management in vegetables.

    There will also be time to for scientists to discuss upcoming research as well.

    Those interested in attending can RSVP by calling 239-658-3400 or email Zoe Watson at zshobert@ufl.edu.

  • U.S. Sugar Statement on Motion to Dismiss Baseless Lawsuit Against Florida Farmers

    Clewiston, FL— Judy Sanchez, Senior Director of Corporate Communications and Public Affairs at U.S. Sugar, issued the following statement on the company’s motion to dismiss filed in response to a baseless lawsuit brought against sugarcane farmers:

    Sanchez

    “Publicly available air quality monitoring data maintained by the state of Florida has shown, and continues to show, that the Glades communities have some of the best air quality in the state. This is a science-based fact, supported by actual data. The hypothetical, preliminary model included in the Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint is a nonsensical misrepresentation of reality and is a disservice to our community. This is unfortunate, but not entirely unexpected, given the historical playbook of those who willingly ignore data and use baseless claims to attack our communities.

    “As farmers, we rely on proven science and data to inform our daily growing and harvesting decisions. Just as important, we live in this community and take very serious our responsibility to be good neighbors and stewards of our environment. That is a commitment we will never waver on or compromise.”

  • Soil Sample for Nematodes Now

    UGA Extension photo/Stubby root-knot nematode on onion plants in 2017.

    The time is now to soil sample for nematodes, says Pablo Navia, Adama Technical Development Leader for East Region.

    “This is the best time since populations of nematodes are really high right now in the soil. There’s still some roots that they are feeding on. This is the best time to sample,” Navia said. “It’s a good way to know what enemy you’re dealing with next season.”

    Navia said growers need to coordinate with the Extension agents in their county to take samples and arrange to take their samples to the appropriate lab.

    “Each state’s Extension agent will know where to send the sample. Each university will have their lab and you can send the sample to their lab,” Navia said.

    Navia recommends that producers take between 4 and 8 samples in a field, which will provide growers a good representation of the entire field.

    There are different types of nematodes that impact vegetables, with root-knot nematodes being the most widespread and can cause the most damage. Nematodes are especially troubling because of the wide range of potential hosts. In addition to vegetables, nematodes cause problems in cotton, peanut and tobacco plants.

    “It’s one of the most damaging pests out there,” Navia said. “It’s as important as a soil-borne disease or a foliar disease. There are many diseases that can affect a particular crop. But nematodes will make everything worse. If you have nematodes, then you have high chances of losing your crop.”

    Soil sampling better prepares growers for the following season and will help them know if numbers are beyond threshold and if further action is warranted.

    “If you have root-knot nematode and you find one nematode in your sample, that means you may be in trouble next season. Nematodes, like stubby root for example, the threshold is 200. Depending on the crop, like the citrus nematode, the threshold is 1,000,” Navia said. “It really depends on the species.”

  • Southeastern Farmer of Year Winner to be Named at ’21 Sunbelt Ag Expo

    Contact: Becca Turner
    (229) 985-1968 x2228

    Due to the cancellation of the 2020 Sunbelt Ag Expo show, plans for the selection of the 2020 Swisher Sweets/Sunbelt Ag Expo Southeastern Farmer of the Year Winner have been amended. Originally, this year’s judging tour was planned for August 10-14. Due to current health concerns, the tour has been postponed indefinitely. 2020 State Winners will be recognized, and an overall winner will be announced at the 2021 Sunbelt Ag Expo. A new class of state winners will not be selected in 2021.

    “We have considered virtual options for the judging tour and the awards ceremony, but the Farmer of the Year program is not a virtual event. The program is about so much more – the interaction amongst our 10 state winners, and the 265 winners that have been awarded over the last 30 years cannot be replaced. To have a Farmer of the Year class not be able to experience the in-person judging tour, the trip to South Georgia and the Sunbelt Ag Expo is not an option in our book,” said Chip Blalock, Sunbelt Ag Expo Executive Director.

    The Sunbelt Ag Expo looks forward to welcoming visitors and the 2020 Farmer of the year class in 2021 as it showcases the latest in farming technology, October 19-21. Visit www.sunbeltexpo.com for more information.

  • Commissioner Fried Pleads for Secretary Perdue Expand CFAP to Include More Commodities

    Tallahassee, Fla.Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried wrote to U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue on Tuesday, once again asking the USDA to expand eligibility for the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP) to include additional agricultural commodities.

    commissioner
    Nikki Fried
    Florida Agriculture Commissioner

    On July 9, the USDA announced expanded CFAP eligibility that included many impacted Florida crops, but aquaculture and horticulture commodities were not included at that time. With the August 28 CFAP enrollment deadline approaching, Commissioner Fried again asked Secretary Perdue to include aquaculturists and nursery growers in CFAP, and to extend the enrollment deadline for these additional industries.

    Florida ranks second in the U.S. for nursery crops, valued at $574 million, and is among the top U.S. states for seafood production at $730 million in value, with over 400 commercial aquaculture operations. Both industries faced significant losses due to COVID-19 market disruptions.

    Fried’s letter to Perdue may be downloaded here or viewed here on social media.

    Commissioner Fried has been a vocal advocate of USDA assistance during COVID-19 for Florida’s agriculture industry, which has suffered over $522 million in losses since March for seasonal crops alone. In March, she asked the USDA to speed up billions in assistance to farmers and purchase additional crops through federal programs, and has encouraged producers to sign up for USDA purchase programs including CFAP.

    Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services

  • CFAP Deadline is Aug. 28

    Farmers impacted by COVID-19 and hoping to take advantage of the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program have a little more than three weeks left before the Aug. 28 deadline. That is when the United States Department of Agriculture will stop accepting applications from producers.

    Runge

    Through CFAP, USDA made available $16 billion in financial assistance to producers of agricultural commodities who have suffered a 5%-or-greater price decline due to COVID-19 and face additional significant marketing costs as a result of lower demand, surplus production, and disruptions to shipping patterns and the orderly marketing of commodities.

    Max Runge, Extension specialist in agricultural economics at Auburn University, believes CFAP has been a success for growers.

    “Overall, I think it has been a success. It provided some much-needed funding and hopefully some cash flow for some producers that needed it. It wasn’t a perfect program. I know some people feel like they were left out or they didn’t get enough, or it should have been done differently. But overall, I think it was very helpful to our producers.”

    In mid-July, the USDA, amended the original crop list covered under CFAP to include additional commodities, including the addition of blueberries to Category 1.

    According to https://www.farmers.gov/cfap/specialty, eligible specialty crops in CFAP are broken down into three categories:

    1. Had crops that suffered a five percent-or-greater price decline between mid-January and mid-April as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic,
    2. Had produce shipped but subsequently spoiled due to loss of marketing channel, and
    3. Had shipments that did not leave the farm or mature crops that remained unharvested.

    Resources for farmers regarding the payments are available at www.farmers.gov/cfap.

  • Broad Sequencing of Tomato Genomes Will Help Geneticists Breed Better Varieties

    UGA photo/UGA horticulture researcher Esther van de Knaap is part of a research group that sequenced and compared the genomes of 100 different varieties of tomato to detect and study how gene variants affect crop traits.

    By Maria M. Lameiras for CAES News

    New technology has led to a greater understanding of how gene placement within the tomato genome influences gene expression and, therefore, the characteristics of the resulting plant’s fruit, a discovery that is important for breeders and producers.

    University of Georgia horticulture researcher Esther van der Knaap provided vital information for an expansive new analysis of genetic variation among tomatoes that uncovered 230,000 previously hidden large-scale differences in DNA between varieties.

    As tomato plants evolved, segments of DNA were deleted, duplicated or rearranged. These structural variations in genomes underpin the vast diversity among tomatoes, changing flavors, altering yield and shaping other important traits, according to a release on the research from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Cold Spring Harbor, New York.

    Part of the UGA Institute of Plant Breeding, Genetics and Genomics, van der Knaap has been studying the genes that determine tomato shape and size for decades, finding that the genetic sequences that control the size of tomatoes do so by controlling cell division or cell size. Her team also found similar sets of shape-control genes in plants other than tomato.

    Research Group

    A research group comprising members of van der Knaap’s lab and investigators at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University and other institutions sequenced and compared the genomes of 100 different varieties of tomato, including robust varieties suitable for industrial agriculture, heirloom varieties and wild relatives of cultivated tomatoes. Within those genomes, the team identified more than 230,000 structural variants. New DNA sequencing technology, along with powerful new genome editing technology, has recently made structural variants easier to detect and study how they affect crop traits.

    The partnership has allowed van der Knaap’s lab to address research questions on genome evolution more effectively than they have been able to on their own in the past.

    “The premise of the study was based on evidence from our lab on the importance of genome structural variation and how they change fruit appearance,” van der Knaap said. “We have been creating resources and knowledge in my lab that has recently expanded the knowledge in other vegetables as well.”

    To gain a better understanding of structural variants’ role in diversity, the team showed that thousands of genes were changed by the structural variants. Then they used CRISPR — the genome editing tool that can make targeted changes in DNA — to show that duplication of a particular gene causes a plant’s tomatoes to increase in size by about 30%.

    Gene Identification

    Because the tomato genome is made up of 900 million base pairs making up the approximately 35,000 genes, identifying which genes control certain traits is important to van der Knaap’s research. This study and the extensive resource it provides has made gene discovery more easily achievable.

    “One base pair is one nucleotide. A kilobase pair (KB) is 1000 base pairs. We’re not talking about changes to one or two nucleotides. We are talking about changes to sometimes 6,000 to 30,000 nucleotides,” van der Knaap said. “That can lead to effects on the phenotype — how the plant looks, how it grows and the type of fruit it creates.”

    A trained molecular biologist and geneticist, van der Knaap is interested in using the structural variations discovered in the study to determine whether they may cause trait variation in fruit shape, weight and flavor. Much of the research in the lab is to genetically map a trait such as weight in the genome. Once the genomic region is found and the researchers know one of the remaining 10 to 20 candidate genes, they examine the region carefully for any variation that could contribute to that trait. Some of the apparent causes are single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP), but thus far most have been caused by a structural variant. Knowing all the structural variants in the genome facilitates the discovery of novel genes controlling the trait such as weight, shape and flavor.

    “I want to know exactly where these variants occur and then take it one step further to figure out what the change is,” she said. “The genome is linear in higher organisms. The genes are in a certain order in most tomato plants. In other tomatoes, there is a region of about 300KB that is inverted. We don’t know how that happened, but it is inverted. The result of this inversion changed the regulation of the gene that is important for fruit width, making a very flat tomato. It is as if a one-way road suddenly turned around.”

    Tomato Industry

    A $190 billion global industry, understanding how structural variants influence tomatoes gives breeders new power to improve the properties of tomatoes. It also shows how structural variants that can enhance breeding are likely hidden in the complex genomes of many other important vegetables like potatoes, melons and peppers.

    Looking at the whole genomes of many different varieties of tomato equips scientists with the information geneticists need to develop new tomato varieties and producers need to choose what varieties to grow for the traits they desire in a crop.

    “We cross tomato varieties all the time. One pairing might make bigger fruit while another might make more fruit, but there are hundreds of populations and we would need 10 times the greenhouse space to evaluate them all. We have to be smart about it and choose which crosses are going to be the most informative, which ones are going to give us new genes we don’t know about yet,” van der Knaap said. “With the knowledge we create, we can select traits at the genome level that we know, as breeders, will result in a variety with much superior qualities.”

    More information on van der Knaap’s research is available at vanderknaaplab.uga.edu.

  • Fungicide Resistance in Georgia Strawberry Fields

    Figure 1. Anthracnose fruit rot of strawberry © Catherine Eckert / shutterstock.com

    By Phil Brannen, Md Emran Ali, Jeff Cook, Sumyya Waliullah and Owen Hudson

    Anthracnose fruit rot disease, caused by fungal Colletotrichum species, is one of the most significant disease problems of commercial strawberry production in the Southeast.

    Dark, sunken lesions on fruit are the main disease symptoms (Figure 1). Hot, humid weather and significant rainfall make Colletotrichum-induced fruit rot a widespread problem in strawberry production.

    For disease control, growers mainly rely on preventive fungicide applications from flower bud emergence to harvest. The most used single-site fungicides are quinone outside inhibitors (QoIs). The QoI active ingredients azoxystrobin (e.g., Abound) and pyraclostrobin (e.g., Pristine) are often utilized to manage anthracnose fruit rot. If appropriate resistance-management strategies are not implemented, QoIs are at increased risk of resistance development and subsequent control failure.

    The QoIs have been marketed since 1996, and resistance development is expected with long-term use, but limited surveys and in vitro efficacy tests conducted in 2004 and 2008 did not confirm QoI resistance in Georgia. However, more recently, producers have complained of control failure when using QoI fungicides, and resistance has been confirmed.

    RESISTANCE CONFIRMATION

    In 2019, county agents submitted numerous samples to the Plant Molecular Diagnostic Lab in Tifton, GA. Md Emran Ali, the lab director, collected 108 strawberry fruits with visible rot symptoms to test for fungicide resistance. These samples were from seven different strawberry farms scattered throughout Georgia. The farms had received multiple applications of QoI fungicides during the 2019 growing season, as well as in previous seasons.

    Ali identified all isolates as Colletotrichum acutatum. For further confirmation of QoI resistance, he tested all 108 isolates for the presence of the G143A mutation using the PCR-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism assay. His results showed the presence of the G143A mutation in all QoI-resistant C. acutatum isolates, 87 percent of isolates with moderate resistance, but none with reduced sensitivity or sensitive isolates (Table 1). These findings suggest that there is a high risk that resistance has developed in C. acutatum populations wherever QoIs have been utilized over time for control of anthracnose fruit rot in Georgia – and likely elsewhere.

    GROWER RECOMMENDATIONS

    For effective control of this disease, growers need to focus on using multi-site fungicides, such as Captan products, and alternation with classes other than QoIs. The Southeast Regional Strawberry Integrated Pest Management Guide for Plasticulture Production (www.smallfruits.org), edited by Rebecca Melanson of Mississippi State University, provides excellent information on fungicide selection under various conditions of resistance to anthracnose and/or botrytis fruit rots. 

    Moving forward, growers should have their anthracnose populations tested for QoI resistance. Use of QoIs may be limited in future management strategies as a result of widespread resistance development. The Plant Molecular Diagnostic Laboratory, a lab service of the University of Georgia Department of Plant Pathology, is now providing fungicide resistance testing support for several plant pathogens like anthracnose of strawberry. The clinic can accept symptomatic fruit samples (generally 10 per site) to test for resistance.

    In 2019, funds were provided by the Southern Region Small Fruit Consortium for resistance testing of both anthracnose and botrytis — free of charge to producers from member states until the funds ran out. Check with your local county agent on the status of resistance testing funds. If funds are not available, you are still encouraged to have both anthracnose and/or botrytis profiled for your location. The tests currently available, their pricing, a submission form and submission information are available at the Plant Molecular Diagnostic Lab web page at https://site.caes.uga.edu/alimdl/fungicide-resistance-testing/. See the form at https://site.caes.uga.edu/alimdl/files/2019/02/resistant-profile-form-003.pdf.

    Samples can be shipped to:Plant Molecular Diagnostic Lab

    Department of Plant Pathology

    Tifton, CAES Campus

    Plant Science Building

    115 Coastal Way

    Tifton, GA 31794

    For more information of questions, contact Ali at emran.ali@uga.edu, 229-386-7230 or 229-386-7285.

    Growers are highly encouraged to take advantage of this service. It is very important to know the resistance profile for anthracnose at your location — fungicides that should work and those that will not. If you have questions or need help, contact your local county agent for additional information. It is recommended to overnight samples to the Plant Molecular Diagnostic Lab and to communicate with the lab so it can expect the samples on the day of arrival.

    Fungicide resistance can be devastating, so use these services to ensure that the fungicides you are utilizing are active. Spraying inactive fungicides is the equivalent of spraying water on your strawberry plants. If a fungicide is not active, you waste money on the fungicide, and you can lose your entire crop to disease as well — adding insult to injury.

    This story was from the August edition of VSCNews Magazine. To subscribe, see http://vscnews.com/subscribe/.

  • Grape Sustainability at Risk With Pierce’s Disease

    A tour of the research vineyard at the Clanton Research and Extension Center in Chilton County at the Alabama WIneries and Grape Growers Association meeting in September 2019. Grapes are grown by Elina Coneva and the staff at the CREC. Grape varieties are developed by Dr. Andy Walker, a grape breeder at UC Davis.

    Pierce’s Disease is wreaking havoc in grape vineyards in the Southeast. It is such a problem that University of Georgia Cooperative Extension plant pathologist Phil Brannen is concerned about the sustainability of some farming operations, especially as winter temperatures continue to get warmer.

    “Once you get above 2,000 feet in elevation, I have only rarely seen a single plant come down with this (disease) and that’s still the case. But the areas that are around 1,700 feet in elevation where we used to not see that much of it, when we have two or three warm winters in a row, we really start to see a lot of it. Some of those vineyards, they’re losing 400 to 500 vines a year. That’s not sustainable,” Brannen said. “A lot of vineyards right now that are in north Georgia, they’re suffering a lot of loss from Pierce’s Disease now. If the temperatures get continuously warmer in the wintertime, I don’t know where we’re going to grow this grape.”

    What is Pierce’s Disease?

    Pierce’s Disease is caused by a bacterium that is transmitted by numerous sharpshooter insects, such as the glassy-winged sharpshooters. The bacterium clogs the grape xylem and cuts off nutrient and water flow to the vines. Once infected with Pierce’s disease, vines will die within one to two years.

    “You’ve got the xylem that carries that water and nutrients and if it’s clogged a little bit, you may get by if you have plenty of moisture, but if you get less and less of it, then the water will collapse in that vessel and then you don’t get any,” Brannen said. “When it’s real dry conditions, that is when the symptoms really start to show up. It’s a scorch around the leaf is what you’ll initially see. The berries actually dry up. They form raisins on the vine. You’ll see all of that occurring when it gets really dry in late summer.”

    Brannen said right now is when grape producers will start seeing Pierce’s Disease symptoms.

    Most Effective Management Tactic

    He said the best management tactic that growers potentially have is with disease resistant plants, bred by scientists at UC Davis and are being researched at a couple of sites in Georgia and in Alabama.

    According to Elina Coneva, an Extension specialist in the Horticulture Department at Auburn University, three red wine grape selections were planted at the Chilton Research and Extension Center (CREC) in Clanton in 2010 and are showing promising results. One white wine selection was planted in 2017. So far, the research team has not lost one plant to Pierce’s Disease.  

    The only other option is try to apply a soil-based Imidacloprid insecticide in the spring to kill the sharpshooter insects.

    “If it goes into the root system and gets into the soil, it will last a long time in the plant. That will kill the sharpshooters and that cuts back on transmission a lot,” Brannen said.