Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus In Oats – Treating Oats With Barley Yellow Dwarf

If you grow oats, barley, or wheat on your small farm or backyard garden, you need to know about barley yellow dwarf virus. This is a damaging disease that can cause losses of up to 25 percent. Know the signs and what you can do to prevent and manage this viral disease.

What is Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus?

This is a disease that affects grains in most places in the
U.S. where they are grown. Because of how widespread it is and how it affects
yield, it is considered to be one of the most important grain diseases farmers
face.

Barley yellow dwarf disease is caused by a virus that is
spread by aphids.
Just 30 minutes of feeding on an infected plant and one of these tiny insects
is capable of transferring the virus to the next plant on which it feeds.

The name barley yellow dwarf is used because it is
descriptive of the symptoms the disease causes in barley. Yellow dwarf virus on
oat crops causes slightly different symptoms, but the name has stuck and is
called barley yellow dwarf no matter which grain it infects.

Symptoms of Oat Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus

Barley yellow dwarf virus in oats may cause some minor early symptoms that look like nutrient deficiencies, herbicide injury, or root rot, so it can be easy to overlook initially. Later, the disease will cause yellow discoloration at the leaf tips, which in oats will then turn red or purple. These spots turn bright yellow in barley and yellow or red in wheat. Discolored leaf tips may curl in and the leaves generally become stiff.

Timing of infection can cause different effects. Oats with
barley yellow dwarf virus that begins when the plants are young will be stunted
and produce less. When the disease sets in during the fall, plants may die over
the winter, even without showing any symptoms. When older plants develop the
disease, they may only show signs on new growth.

Managing Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus in Oats

To prevent major yield losses in your oats, it is important
to take steps to prevent or manage this viral disease. There are resistant
varieties of oats, which is a good place to start.

Only plant your oats during the time of year recommended.
Early spring sowing, for instance, can increase the risk of aphid exposure.
Remove any volunteer grains from your fields, as these can harbor the disease.

Insecticides for aphids may be of limited usefulness because
the effect doesn’t last very long. Early spring, when plants are young and most
vulnerable, is the best time to try chemical control. You can also try adding ladybugs,
a natural aphid predator, to your garden and promoting an environment that is
conducive to their presence.

This article was last updated on 10/02/21
Read more about Oats

If you grow oats, barley, or wheat on your small farm or backyard garden, you need to know about barley yellow dwarf virus. This is a damaging disease that can cause losses of up to 25 percent. Know the signs and what you can do to prevent and manage this viral disease.

What is Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus?

This is a disease that affects grains in most places in the
U.S. where they are grown. Because of how widespread it is and how it affects
yield, it is considered to be one of the most important grain diseases farmers
face.

Barley yellow dwarf disease is caused by a virus that is
spread by aphids.
Just 30 minutes of feeding on an infected plant and one of these tiny insects
is capable of transferring the virus to the next plant on which it feeds.

The name barley yellow dwarf is used because it is
descriptive of the symptoms the disease causes in barley. Yellow dwarf virus on
oat crops causes slightly different symptoms, but the name has stuck and is
called barley yellow dwarf no matter which grain it infects.

Symptoms of Oat Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus

Barley yellow dwarf virus in oats may cause some minor early symptoms that look like nutrient deficiencies, herbicide injury, or root rot, so it can be easy to overlook initially. Later, the disease will cause yellow discoloration at the leaf tips, which in oats will then turn red or purple. These spots turn bright yellow in barley and yellow or red in wheat. Discolored leaf tips may curl in and the leaves generally become stiff.

Timing of infection can cause different effects. Oats with
barley yellow dwarf virus that begins when the plants are young will be stunted
and produce less. When the disease sets in during the fall, plants may die over
the winter, even without showing any symptoms. When older plants develop the
disease, they may only show signs on new growth.

Managing Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus in Oats

To prevent major yield losses in your oats, it is important
to take steps to prevent or manage this viral disease. There are resistant
varieties of oats, which is a good place to start.

Only plant your oats during the time of year recommended.
Early spring sowing, for instance, can increase the risk of aphid exposure.
Remove any volunteer grains from your fields, as these can harbor the disease.

Insecticides for aphids may be of limited usefulness because
the effect doesn’t last very long. Early spring, when plants are young and most
vulnerable, is the best time to try chemical control. You can also try adding ladybugs,
a natural aphid predator, to your garden and promoting an environment that is
conducive to their presence.

This article was last updated on 10/02/21
Read more about Oats
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