Weeds could be hosts for aphanomyces and fusarium
A master’s student at the University of Alberta is trying to determine whether weeds are acting as alternative hosts for Aphanomyces and Fusarium.
Logan Snow is working on the project. He is being advised by weed research scientist Breanne Tidemann with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.
“We are trying to determine whether weeds are acting as alternative hosts, in particular black medic, which is showing up more commonly in lentil fields, especially in Saskatchewan. We want to see if it’s acting as an alternative host for Aphanomyces and possibly making that long-term rotation out of pulses more difficult to achieve,” Tidemann said. “But we’re also looking at whether it’s acting as an alternative host for Fusarium and at common weeds for Fusarium root rot.”
Tidemann explained that Snow will be doing a greenhouse study in which he is inoculating weeds with Fusarium avenaceum, and they are looking at whether the pathogen can use common weeds as a host.


