Home
Calendar
Search
Contact Us
Webmaster
 

Evaluation Of Three Control Measures For Verticillium Wilt In Processing Tomatoes: Sudangrass Cover Crop, Field Corn, And Metham

Gene Miyao and Mike Davis

Objectives

Our objective was to evaluate the reported success of a Sudangrass cover crop in controlling Verticillium wilt, a widespread pathogen of statewide importance to processing tomato growers. Our interest is in reducing vine collapse and yield reductions caused by strain 2. Our 1993 data indicates tomato yields, in one of 2 trials, increased about 20% following a Sudangrass summer-grown crop. We could not detect a reduction in Verticillium incidence.

Procedures

Sudangrass was grown during the summer of 1994 in preparation for a 1995 tomato crop. We compared the summer-grown cover crop of Sudangrass to an untreated control and to a chemical treatment of 12 in.-deep shanked, banded metham. Field corn as a previous year's crop was also grown as a comparison to Sudangrass. Plant infection was evaluated by cutting stems at ground level and examining degree of vascular discoloration. The field plots were about 50 feet long with border rows on both sides of a central bed. Treatments were replicated 8 times. Only the central 20' by 5' portion of the center bed was harvested for yield. We changed our 'susceptible' variety to La Rossa on the basis of lab tests conducted by UC Berkeley pathologist Tom Gordon.

Results

Our Sudangrass trial in 1995 was not successful in reducing Verticillium wilt in tomatoes. Canopy cover of tomatoes was less with the Sudangrass planting as compared to the untreated (44% vs. 31%), which resulted in more sunburned fruit at harvest. Vine deterioration was least following metham. Sudangrass had no measurable effect on infection level of plants as measured by vascular discoloration. Though the reason is unclear, yields were lower in the Sudangrass and corn treatments as compared to the untreated control (about 36 vs 46 tons/A).

Over the 3 years of tests on the UC Davis campus, no convincing evidence was found to support the hypothesis that a summer-grown crop of Sudan grass prior to growing tomatoes would reduce the impact of Verticillium in processing tomatoes.

Table 1. Influence of Sudangrass, metham, and field corn on incidence of Verticillium wilt, and yield of processing tomatoes La Rossa, UC Davis, 1995.

Micro- Sclerotia/ (g) soil

Stem Infection Level*

Stand (seedlings per foot)

% Canopy Loss

Marketable Yield Tons/A

% Fruit Biomass

Sunburn Fruit

1. Untreated

12.3

1.5

4.3

31

45.8

51.0

9

2. Sudangrass

10.0

1.5

2.8

44

36.1

42.2

13

3. Metham

9.4

1.4

2.7

22

46.7

51.6

8

4. Field Corn

12.2

1.4

3.6

37

36.6

42.2

12

5. LSD 5%

NS

NS

NS

6.7

2.5

2.6

1.2

*stem infection level: 0=none, 3=severe with dark internal discoloration



Return to the index for the
Cover Crop Research and Education Summaries


Home | Search | Calendar | Contact Us | Webmaster | Copyright Notices