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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Small Grains
Barley Stripe
Pathogen: Pyrenophora graminea
(Reviewed 2/07,
updated 2/07)
In this Guideline:
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SYMPTOMS
Initially, long, pale or yellow stripes appear on 2nd, 3rd, and subsequent leaves. The stripes become a darker color as
the fungus sporulates on the leaf surface. As the infected plant matures, the
leaves tatter (split along stripes). Infected plants usually are stunted, and
produce blank (sterile) spikes. Rarely, a few seed are produced by infected
spikes, and late-forming tillers may produce normal (fertile) spikes.
COMMENTS ON THE DISEASE
Barley stripe is a problem only in barley (Hordeum spp.). The fungus is seedborne and survives in the
outer layers of infected seed. Coleoptiles of seedlings are infected by the
fungus under cool, moist conditions. The fungus grows systemically within the
plant, produces toxins, and kills cells and discolors leaf tissue between
veins, thus causing striped lesions. When conditions are wet or humid, spores
are produced on the surface of leaves at about the time spikes of healthy
plants in the field begin to flower. Spores are dispersed by wind to these
developing spikes, germinate, and cause infections. After infection, the fungus
becomes dormant in the hull or pericarp of the kernel until the seed germinates.
Kernels are most susceptible to infection during early development. Moisture
from rain or dew is necessary for spike infection, and plants with kernel
infections are symptomless. Only one cycle of infection and spore production
occurs each season.
MANAGEMENT
Use certified seed. (Fields are approved for certification only if they are
found free of barley stripe.)
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Small Grains
UC ANR Publication 3466
Diseases
R. M. Davis, Plant Pathology, UC Davis
L. F. Jackson, Agronomy, UC Davis
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