
Home Lawn: Turf Tips
Managing
summer lawn diseases
While we encounter most turf diseases in home lawns
during the spring, when temperatures are moderating along with afternoon
spring showers, our summer days can also present several turf disease
problems.
Gray Leaf Spot (Piricularia grisea) of
St. Augustinegrass can cause severe thinning of home lawns during
the heat of summer. This disease is more common during extended
periods of hot, humid weather. Although primarily a disease
of St. Augustinegrass, it is also found on crabgrass and occasionally
on centipedegrass. Infected turf will have irregular gray,
dirty-yellow or ash-colored spots with brown, purple, or water-soaked
borders on leaf blades. The disease is usually noticed first
in shaded areas that remain damp longer. Under heavy disease
development, the grass may have a burned or scorched appearance resulting
in death or severe spotting of the leaf blades. Fungus spores
are carried to sites of new infection by the wind, splashed rain,
irrigation water, and mowers. Seldom will this disease
kill an entire lawn, but can thin it severely enough to be unsightly
and encourage weed infestations.
‘Helminthosporium’ Leaf Blights (Bipolaris
spp., Curvularia spp., etc.) are probably the most serious
summer diseases of bermuda grass and zoysia grass if left unmanaged. Symptoms
are round or oblong spots on the leaf blades and are usually brown
or purple in color. As the disease infections increase the
leaf sheaths turn brown and die. The turf may be badly thinned
and even die in patches thus giving an appearance that adequately
describes the disease’s other name of “melting
out”.
Dollar Spot (Sclerotinia homoecarpa)
is a common summer disease found on many turf species, but is most
common on Bermudagrass. This disease is found more prevalent
on neglected turf or areas that are under moisture or nutritional
stress caused by the lack of nitrogen. Humid weather with heavy
dew promotes the disease, which begins as small (2-3 inch) circular
dead spots throughout the lawn. These small spots can then
grow together to form much larger blighted turf. Fungicides
are effective in controlling dollar spot, but a good fertilization
and watering program will also help in the management of this disease.
Controlling these summer diseases is best accomplished
by keeping the turf as healthy as possible by reducing stress conditions. Avoid
excessive nitrogen fertilization (with the exception of dollar spot). Water,
when needed, early enough in the day so foliage will not remain wet
overnight. Mow regularly at proper height with a sharp mower
only when the turf is dry. Be prepared to apply fungicides according
to label recommendations if climatic conditions favor disease proliferation.
Published July 3, 2006
Dr. Wayne Wells is an Extension Professor
and Turfgrass Specialist. His mailing address is Department of Plant
and Soil Sciences, Mail Stop 9555, Mississippi State, MS 39762. wwells@ext.msstate.edu
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