t. 315-379-9192
f. 315-379-0926
e. stlawrence@cornell.edu
w. stlawrence.cce.cornell.edu
NNY
Field Crop Survey Provides Real-Time Alert, Data Trend Tracking
To help Northern New York farmers be alert to newly emerging field crop
diseases and trends, the farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural
Development Program funds an annual field crop diagnosis and assessment
project. The data produced by the survey is critical to farmers locally and
statewide.
The annual evaluations, revived in 2013, provide farmers with real-time alerts
in the current growing season, and add to multi-year data tracking that
identifies trends and indicates emerging and re-emerging challenges.
"Northern New York farmers are increasingly faced with important
management decisions that require real-time knowledge of plant diseases. The
regional survey provides data to help them select crop varieties with
disease-resistance and plan management practices to most cost-effectively and
efficiently respond to the current-day threats and year-to-year
variability," says project leader Michael E. Hunter, a Cornell University
Cooperative Extension Regional Field Crops Specialist.
Hunter and Cornell University Cooperative Extension Regional Field Crops and
Soils Specialist Kitty O'Neil collaborate with Cornell University Plant
Pathologist Gary Bergstrom, Ph.D. to respectively detect potential issues and
collect crop samples in the fields, and analyze them at the Bergstrom Lab at
Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.
Thirty-two farms located across the six-county Northern New York region that
includes Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Jefferson, Lewis and St. Lawrence counties
participated in the most recently-completed survey.
The NNYADP-funded survey also includes 19 sentinel cornfields and 18 sentinel
fields of soybean, chosen to maximize the diversity of environments and
cropping practices that can impact disease potential. In 2018, across the NNY
survey area, seven corn diseases and six soybean diseases in total were
identified and diagnosed.
"We are seeing an increasing number of growers using an integrated
approach to managing field crop diseases on their farms. There are growers that
are now paying closer attention to disease-resistant crop varieties, crop
rotations, tillage practices, soil fertility management and fungicide selection
based on the crop diseases identified in this regional survey," Hunter
notes.
The results of the 2019 field crops disease diagnosis and assessment survey
will be posted on the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program
website at www.nnyagdev.org and
disseminated to growers, crop consultants, agribusiness and extension field crops
educators at crop meetings and field days locally and statewide.
Funding for the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is supported
by the New York State Legislature and administered by the New York State
Department of Agriculture and Markets.