Apple scab shows fungicide resistance
Janna Beckerman, an associate professor of botany and plant pathology, said that extensive, long-term use of four popular fungicides has led to resistances in apples in Indiana and Michigan, the focus of her study.
“The fungicides that are regularly used to control scab have started to fail,” Beckerman said. “But the most disturbing thing we found is that many of the samples we tested were resistant to all four fungicides. It’s kind of like multidrug resistance in antibiotics. This is full-blown resistance.”
“It can cause orchard failures,” Beckerman said. “An orchard grower that has this could lose blocks of an orchard, or depending on the amount of diversity in the orchard, they could lose the entire crop.”
It’s thought that when organisms adapt to form resistance, that change will weaken the organism in some other way. Beckerman said the study, done with Purdue graduate student Kim Chapman and Michigan State University professor George Sundin, showed apple scab, on the contrary, is becoming resistant to fungicides with no apparent fitness penalty to itself.
“Having these multiple resistances to fungicides doesn’t debilitate them in any way,” Beckerman said.
The only options apple growers have, Beckerman said, are to use older fungicides that are tightly regulated, require more frequent application and are more expensive.
“It’s going to change how growers manage their orchards,” Beckerman said. “The more susceptible apple cultivars, like McIntosh, will become more chemically intensive to manage. Growers have few options as it is, and this will limit their options even further.”
Beckerman said she and her collaborators would work to develop faster tests to detect fungicide resistance in apple scab to help growers change management plans in a timely manner. USDA, Purdue University and the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station funded the research.
By Brian Wallheimer, Purdue University