A forage crop diseases and pests incidences identification and management system is precondition for the viewpoint of ecological and environmental protection to address the issues of numerous types of forage crop disease and pests-control, and management for easy identification. The incidence of diseases and pests reduces the productivity of forage crops causing significant financial losses, and decrease feed production. This review paper is aimed to illustrate the common diseases and pests in forage crop production and management and indicated the way forward. The application of chemical pesticides used to control the diseases and pests could affect plants, soil, and wildlife as well as human wellbeing. In the next years, there will undoubtedly be a greater need for high-quality feed production as people become more conscious of illnesses and pests. When preparing forage this way, less non-organic items are used. Based on recommendations, chemical pesticides and fertilizers will be essential. In order to minimize the impact of disease and insect infestations on productivity, bio-management of disease and insect pests in fodder crops the following year will surely be crucial. Therefore, several management strategies offer effective and environmentally sound affordable defense. Against foliar diseases, nematode-caused root knot disease, and soil-borne and insect forage crop pests. These disease and pest management systems allowed indispensable contributions in forage genetic resource conservation.
Published in | International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology (Volume 9, Issue 3) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12 |
Page(s) | 104-111 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Disease, Pest, Management, Conservation, Forage
Disease | Infected plants | References |
---|---|---|
Anthracnose, Bacterial wilt, stem disease, brown root rot, leaf spot, sprig black stem, Downy mildew | Alfalfa, Sorghum, Oat, Cowpea, Lablab, Lucerne, Soybean, Leucaena, Gliricidia and Calliandra | [5-8] |
Phytophthora root rot, Aphanomyces, Pythium, Rhizoctonia, Rhizoctonia, Sclerotinia | Alfalfa | [9-11] |
Bacterial canker, seedling blight, tar spot | Sesbania, Maize Sorghum | [5, 6] |
Sercospor leaf blight | Cowpea, Lablab, Soybean | [12] |
Sooty stripe | Sorghum, Maize | [13] |
Stem rust, leaf spot | Ryegrass | [14] |
Dwarf virus, crown rust | Oat | [14] |
Forage and fodder | Disease | Symptom | Management |
---|---|---|---|
Sorghum | Smuts | Conical at the tip Grain convert to smut sori Dirty grey sac | 1. Seed treatment with fungicide 2. Seed immersion in 0.5% formalin for 2hs. & dried quickly 3. Use 0.5-3% copper sulphate solution for 10-15 min then dried and sowing 4. Use fungicide like carboxin (vitavax, Bavistin) . [20] |
Oat and Sorghum | Loose smut | Affected ear appears like leafy Dark colored spores | 1. Seed treatment with formalin, sulpher, copper sulphate, carboxin, Bavistin etc. 2. Crop rotation and field sanitation to destroy spore from soil . [7] |
Sorghum | Head smut | During ear head or flowering inflorescence is converted to big sorus, thin grayish to white Spores formed at leafs | 1. Sanitation, seed treatment and crop rotation 2. Destroy affected plants smutted head in cloth bags and dipping in boiling water to kill the pathogen . [21] |
Long smut | Damage grain in an ear Thick whitish to yellow membrane at the ears Green spore balls | 1. Difficult to control because it is transmitted by air 2. Controlled by adjusting sowing dates . [7, 20] | |
Oat, Maize, Phalaris Grass, Lucerne and Sorghum | Rust | Yield reduction Occur at 2 months old of plants Appear at lower leaf part Older leaves dry prematurely | 1. Removal of other carrier plant because it survive on other hosts 2. Spray Zineb or Mancozeb at 1.25 kg/ha in 15 days interval 3. Use hyper-parasite fungus Trichothecium roseum . [13, 22] |
Sorghum | Downy Mildew | Whitish color on growing surface of leaves It spread over the leaf blade then, appear yellowish through upper surface | 1. It is soil born disease so cultural deep ploughing in (30-35 cm), could control the disease. 2. Use of potassium azide at 25 WP (2g per liter) of water at 10 and 40 or 20 and 50 days after planting . [21] |
Sorghum | Anthracnose and red rot | It appears as small red, purple or brown spots with whitish or purple center It has 2-4mm long and 1-2 mm broad Discoloration when stem split | Seed treatment with Captan or Thiram at 4g/kg seed and spraying of Mancozeb at 1.25 kg/ha . [23] |
Insect species | Host plants | References |
---|---|---|
Odontotermes (like termites), white grubs, Chrysolagria, Alcidodes erythropterus, Acanthoscelides obtectus and Agonoscelis pubescens Thunb | Sesbania sesban, Tree lucerne, Cajanus cajan and lupine | [33, 29, 10] |
Aphi fabae | Cajanus cajan, Gliricidia sepium | [31] |
Aphis craccivora | Cowpea, alfalfa | [29, 7] |
Lepidopterous, Coleoptera, Homoptera, Thysanoptera, Diptera and Hemiptera | Cowpea, alfalfa, lablab | [34, 10, 36] |
Brachycaudus helychrisi, acrosiphum euphorbiae, Aphis craccivora, Acyrthosiphon kondoi, Myzus persicae | Lupine, Cowpea, alfalfa, lablab, tree lucerne, faba beans | [35, 9] |
Sitona hispidulus, Sitona aliceae, Sitona lineellus | Tree Lucerne, cowpea, alfalfa, | [37, 11] |
Spodoptera frugiperda, Chilo partellus | Napier grass, maize, (Pennisetum purpureum), sorghum (Vulgare sudanense) | [12, 2] |
Control methods | Application |
---|---|
Cultural | 1. Use treated, improved and resistance seed 2. Timely planting or sowing 3. Burning of old crops debris 4. Removal of weeds |
Physical and mechanical | 1. Manual control by destroying (egg, larvae, pupa and adult etc.) 2. Pheromone trap (sex pheromone and aggregating pheromone) 3. Insect light trap |
Biological | 1. Uses of bio agent like Trichogramma species, lady bird, beetle 2. Chrysopa the installation of bird perches at 15 birds per hectare |
Organic insecticide | 1. Use of neem seed kernel extract 2. Spray of nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) at 2.5 ml/10 liter water 3. Soil treatment at 1.25 kg/ha or seed treatment with 5g/kg of seed by bio fungicide like Trichoderma virile |
Chemical control | Uses of chemicals based on proper stage of application |
Sterile insect | Mass rearing of pest species on artificial diet by exposing to the radiation to cause chromosome damage, damaged; chromosome not fertile for mating. |
CIAT | International Center for Agricultural Technology |
ITPGRFA | International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture |
NPV | Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus |
SMTA | Standard Material Transfer Agreement International Center for Agriculture |
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APA Style
Aleme, M., Mengistu, G. (2024). Impacts of Diseases and Pests on Forage Crop Production and Management Systems: A Review. International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology, 9(3), 104-111. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12
ACS Style
Aleme, M.; Mengistu, G. Impacts of Diseases and Pests on Forage Crop Production and Management Systems: A Review. Int. J. Ecotoxicol. Ecobiol. 2024, 9(3), 104-111. doi: 10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12
AMA Style
Aleme M, Mengistu G. Impacts of Diseases and Pests on Forage Crop Production and Management Systems: A Review. Int J Ecotoxicol Ecobiol. 2024;9(3):104-111. doi: 10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12
@article{10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12, author = {Melkam Aleme and Gezahegn Mengistu}, title = {Impacts of Diseases and Pests on Forage Crop Production and Management Systems: A Review }, journal = {International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {104-111}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijee.20240903.12}, abstract = {A forage crop diseases and pests incidences identification and management system is precondition for the viewpoint of ecological and environmental protection to address the issues of numerous types of forage crop disease and pests-control, and management for easy identification. The incidence of diseases and pests reduces the productivity of forage crops causing significant financial losses, and decrease feed production. This review paper is aimed to illustrate the common diseases and pests in forage crop production and management and indicated the way forward. The application of chemical pesticides used to control the diseases and pests could affect plants, soil, and wildlife as well as human wellbeing. In the next years, there will undoubtedly be a greater need for high-quality feed production as people become more conscious of illnesses and pests. When preparing forage this way, less non-organic items are used. Based on recommendations, chemical pesticides and fertilizers will be essential. In order to minimize the impact of disease and insect infestations on productivity, bio-management of disease and insect pests in fodder crops the following year will surely be crucial. Therefore, several management strategies offer effective and environmentally sound affordable defense. Against foliar diseases, nematode-caused root knot disease, and soil-borne and insect forage crop pests. These disease and pest management systems allowed indispensable contributions in forage genetic resource conservation. }, year = {2024} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Impacts of Diseases and Pests on Forage Crop Production and Management Systems: A Review AU - Melkam Aleme AU - Gezahegn Mengistu Y1 - 2024/09/06 PY - 2024 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12 DO - 10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12 T2 - International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology JF - International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology JO - International Journal of Ecotoxicology and Ecobiology SP - 104 EP - 111 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2575-1735 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijee.20240903.12 AB - A forage crop diseases and pests incidences identification and management system is precondition for the viewpoint of ecological and environmental protection to address the issues of numerous types of forage crop disease and pests-control, and management for easy identification. The incidence of diseases and pests reduces the productivity of forage crops causing significant financial losses, and decrease feed production. This review paper is aimed to illustrate the common diseases and pests in forage crop production and management and indicated the way forward. The application of chemical pesticides used to control the diseases and pests could affect plants, soil, and wildlife as well as human wellbeing. In the next years, there will undoubtedly be a greater need for high-quality feed production as people become more conscious of illnesses and pests. When preparing forage this way, less non-organic items are used. Based on recommendations, chemical pesticides and fertilizers will be essential. In order to minimize the impact of disease and insect infestations on productivity, bio-management of disease and insect pests in fodder crops the following year will surely be crucial. Therefore, several management strategies offer effective and environmentally sound affordable defense. Against foliar diseases, nematode-caused root knot disease, and soil-borne and insect forage crop pests. These disease and pest management systems allowed indispensable contributions in forage genetic resource conservation. VL - 9 IS - 3 ER -