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Growing Wheat in Apple Orchards: A Possible Aid in Preventing Replant
Disease

Growing Wheat in Apple Orchards:
A Possible Aid in Preventing Replant Disease
Growers of the nation's largest crop of applesin Washington
Statemay benefit by planting another of the Pacific Northwest's top
commodities: wheat.
But the wheat in this case wouldn't be a typical for-profit crop. Grown
instead as a rotation crop or cover crop in the orchard, it might help prevent
replant disease, a crippling condition that strikes young orchards. And it
could serve as an alternative to methyl bromide and other soil fumigants
typically used to sterilize old orchards before planting new ones.
The idea comes from Mark Mazzola, a plant pathologist at the Agricultural
Research Service's Tree Fruit Research
Laboratory in Wenatchee, Washington. He's discovered that in the Pacific
Northwest, replant disease seems to be caused by buildup of a complex of four
soilborne fungi: Cylindrocarpon, Phytophthora, Pythium, and
Rhizoctonia.
"Apple trees seem to change the soil in a way that favors these
pathogens," Mazzola says. "Some wheat varieties, on the other hand,
modify the soil environment to the benefit of different microorganisms."
Specifically, he found a bacterium, Pseudomonas putida, in some wheat
soils that can protect young apple roots from the fungi. ARS has patented use
of a strain of the bacterium to prevent replant disease.
Searching for Root Causes
When nothing is done between taking out an old orchard and putting in a new
one, the young trees are often stunted and have small, decayed root systems.
For years, scientists have debated whether the cause was biologicala
disease or organismor a result of abiotic factors, such as soil
chemistry.
"Since methyl bromide and fungicides that suppress microbes seem to
improve apple trees' health, it now looks like the cause is something
biological," says Mazzola. "That cause may vary from place to place.
In the Northeast, for example, nematodes may cause a problem. Here in
Washington, specific groups of fungi seem to be the primary culprits," he
says.
Methyl bromide is due to be phased out by 2005, and other common pesticides
used in Northwest orchards may also be taken off the shelf because of
environmental concerns. For that reason, and to support the region's organic
growers, Mazzola is looking for a nonchemical approach to prevent replant
disease.
The search is becoming more urgent all the time. "Years ago, growers
might have left an orchard in for several decades," Mazzola says.
"But to meet market demands, some growers now pull out old orchards and
plant new varieties much sooner."
Growers produce at least a dozen commercial varieties in Washington's
billion-dollar-a-year apple industry. About half of the nation's apples are
produced there on about 180,000 acres. About 10,000 acres of apples are
replanted each year.
A Bigger Problem Over Time
If a new orchard is planted on ground that was previously used for something
else, the detrimental fungi don't build up fast enough to hurt the trees before
they get established. But if trees are planted into an existing or previous
apple orchard, the fungal population prevents the young, new trees from growing
well.
Scientists agree that chemicals exuded from plants affect the surrounding
soil, thereby favoring specific populations of microorganisms. Although the
specific chemicals have not been identified, Mazzola found that after an
orchard has been in place about 3 years, apples promote a fungal population
that can cause replant disease. He's studied 18 orchards in Washington,
collaborating with Wenatchee Valley College and David Granatstein, director of
Washington State University's Center for Sustainable Agriculture and Natural
Resources in Wenatchee.
Now Mazzola is looking at how long wheat would have to be grown as a
rotation crop to change the soil microbial community enough to stave off
replant disease. Alternatively, he'll look at whether growing wheat as a cover
crop in existing orchards can reduce fungal populations sufficiently to allow
new trees to grow well. He doesn't anticipate that apple growers would harvest
the wheat as a crop, but says that would be up to the individual.
Theoretically, if young trees are given a good start, they'll be able to
growdespite the deleterious fungiwhen they're older. But Mazzola
speculates that continuing to keep populations of these fungi low might improve
yield, even in mature trees. Although greenhouse tests have indicated the
strategy has merit, he doesn't advocate that growers abandon fungicides and
rely on wheat until he has conclusive evidence in a field situation.
"Washington has a progressive apple industry, and they're really
interested in this work," Mazzola says.
Next he'll try to identify why some wheat cultivars work while others have
little or no effect. So far, he hasn't found any commonality among wheat
typessuch as hard red or soft whiteonly that some varieties provide
a good environment for P. putida while others don't.
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Last Updated: July 24, 2000
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