Friday, January 28, 2022 CapitalPress.com 3 Idaho Innovators Giving grain farmers better tools By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press JULIET MARSHALL University of Idaho cereal researcher Juliet Marshall studies the envi- ronment as much as wheat and barley varieties. “The varieties that were adapted 30 years ago aren’t necessarily adapted now,” the Idaho Falls-based plant pathologist said. “The envi- ronment is not static and the diseases that are cir- culating are not static. We have new strains of fungal pathogens that change and viral pathogen strains that change.” Warmer weather, for example, benefi ts corn. As farmers grow more of that high-water crop, fungi that cause disease in wheat and barley will proliferate. “Fusarium head blight is one of the bigger ones that is a problem as a result of higher corn production,” Marshall said. Barley yel- low dwarf is another. The aphid-vectored virus can build up on corn and move to fall-planted wheat and barley. She is among the researchers collaborat- ing to develop better ways to control fusarium head blight, which produces a fungus-derived toxin that accumulates on grain. The project with the U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative has received fed- eral funding. Marshall said research- ers are screening wheat and barley varieties for resis- tance, and are working to identify the best fungicides to apply as well as the best timing of application. She said a recently tested fungicide can be applied over a longer period and still reduce the disease and toxin, “so it improves our ability to control the dis- ease. A lot of previous fun- gicides had a very, very narrow window.” While rain often gets strong consideration in Midwestern studies of fusarium head blight, Idaho work by Marshall and her colleagues focuses much Occupation: Univer- sity of Idaho plant pathologist, professor, head of Plant Sciences Department. Based at UI Idaho Falls Research and Extension Center. Education: B.S., M.S., University of Delaware, Newark; Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana-Cham- paign. Age: 57 Home: Idaho Falls Family: Husband Bill Clark, a commercial wheat and barley breed- er. Two adult children. Hobbies: Gardening, travel, camping. Idaho’s wheat and bar- ley commissions, farmers, crop consultants, breeders and other researchers all support her work. “I have a lot of collab- orators,” Marshall said. University of Idaho “The fi rst people who ben- University of Idaho plant pathologist and cereals researcher Juliet Marshall is focused on wheat and barley yield, efi t are the stakeholders quality and disease resistance. — cereal producers in the area.” This story fi rst appeared more on humidity and tem- producers have to plant Variety trials also benefi t paring a new release to an Sept. 10, 2021. perature — particularly when moisture is avail- seed companies by com- industry standard. evening temperatures that able,” Marshall said. Rains are favorable for the fun- came in early this August, gus to infect plants. as corn continued to grow, Unusually warm sum- “and the aphids prefer the B E PA R T O F T H E H E R I TA G E . B E PA R T O F T H E F U T U R E . B E PA R T O F T H E mer nights factored into the newly planted wheat and E XC I T E M E N T. B E P A R T O F T H E C O M M U N I T Y. B E PA R T O F A G R I - S E R V I C E . disease appearing in this barley seedlings over aging year’s Idaho barley crop corn — increasing the like- farther north and at higher lihood of transferring the elevations than usual, she virus.” said. Many new cereal vari- “The more warm nights eties are being introduced. that we have at fl owering, Field trials seek to iden- the higher the chances of tify disease resistance and infection,” Marshall said. yield characteristics suited She is also working with to a production location UI colleagues to identify while “keeping the qual- the pathogen faster using ity that the end users really molecular techniques. That want from those varieties,” could help reduce spread she said. Baking, milling or by optimizing fungicide brewing standards must be application amounts and met, for example. timing, she said. “It’s key for our produc- As for barley yellow ers to know that there are dwarf, “the diffi culty in new varieties out there that reducing virus transmis- will be more economically sion from aphids is com- benefi cial and sustainable plicated when our dryland to them,” Marshall said. 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