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Daniel Hanna 06-10-2003 11:02 AM

New rose fungicide
 
I'm excited that myclobutanil is now on sale as a concentrate in
Australia. It's a new systemic, cheaper than triforine (for some reason)
and more concentrated. It's supposed to be very effective on all rose
fungal diseases (black spot, powdery mildew and rust).

Does anyone have experience of this? How well does it really work in
truth?

(Link posted below for those who want more info - no affiliation.)

http://consumer.yates.com.au/YatesKn...p?article=706&
articletype=KNOWHOW

Radika 06-10-2003 07:12 PM

New rose fungicide
 
Daniel Hanna wrote:
I'm excited that myclobutanil is now on sale as a concentrate in
Australia. It's a new systemic, cheaper than triforine (for some reason)
and more concentrated. It's supposed to be very effective on all rose
fungal diseases (black spot, powdery mildew and rust).

Does anyone have experience of this? How well does it really work in
truth?

(Link posted below for those who want more info - no affiliation.)

http://consumer.yates.com.au/YatesKn...letype=KNOWHOW


No experience at all, but I did find this one research paper about
powdery mildew strains isolated from grape vines in Ontario, Canada that
are resistant to Myclobutanil and how to manage such an infection:

http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/tcjpp/k01-036.html

Here is some information on its itnernational registration for use as a
pesticide - the countries where it is registered and where it is not,
and there appear to be NO countries where it is banned:

http://www.pesticideinfo.org/Detail_...p?Rec_Id=PC120

--
Radika
California
USDA 9 / Sunset 15


Daniel Hanna 06-10-2003 10:15 PM

New rose fungicide
 
In Radika wrote:
No experience at all, but I did find this one research paper about
powdery mildew strains isolated from grape vines in Ontario, Canada
that are resistant to Myclobutanil and how to manage such an
infection:

http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/tcjpp/k01-036.html


Fascinating.. I wonder if roses can become resistant too. I always
suspected as much of triforine, which is my current mainstay. Well, at
least myclobutanil can be added to my rotating arsenal!


Here is some information on its itnernational registration for use as
a pesticide - the countries where it is registered and where it is
not, and there appear to be NO countries where it is banned:

http://www.pesticideinfo.org/Detail_...p?Rec_Id=PC120


Thanks for the heads-up on that web site, I'm going to look up
everything I spray there!

allanbugg 09-10-2003 01:33 AM

New rose fungicide
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Daniel Hanna
In Radika wrote:
No experience at all, but I did find this one research paper about
powdery mildew strains isolated from grape vines in Ontario, Canada
that are resistant to Myclobutanil and how to manage such an
infection:

http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/tcjpp/k01-036.html


Fascinating.. I wonder if roses can become resistant too. I always
suspected as much of triforine, which is my current mainstay. Well, at
least myclobutanil can be added to my rotating arsenal!


Here is some information on its itnernational registration for use as
a pesticide - the countries where it is registered and where it is
not, and there appear to be NO countries where it is banned:

http://www.pesticideinfo.org/Detail_...p?Rec_Id=PC120


Thanks for the heads-up on that web site, I'm going to look up
everything I spray there!

The new Yates Rose Shield is actually a combination of two of their existing products. Baycor and Mavrik. Or at least this is what they are telling us in the nurseries.

Allan


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