Winterkill Research Yields New Clues
Excerpts Reprinted from Golf Course News, June 2003
By Kevin J. Ross, CGCS and Andrew Overbeck
One of the most difficult times of year for Snow Belt superintendents is the monument of truth each spring when they find out how well their winterkill prevention activities worked. Prior to and during winter, superintendents face numerous choices concerning ice and snow removal, free water removal and the use of covers. However, winterkill remains an enigma, because what worked one year does not necessarily work in another year.
Research on winterkill has been going on for decades and a miracle cure is yet
to be found. Researchers are focusing in on several aspects of winterkill
causes to pinpoint the exact reasons why damage occurs.
In general, winter damage is defined as any injury that
occurs during the wintertime period. Winter damage can be inflicted by: winter
turfgrass fungi (snow molds and cool season pythiums), ice damage
(suffocation), direct low temperature kill and desiccation. Of these, only true
winter diseases and desiccation are understood, while ice cover damage is still
not totally understood.
Does Ice Cover Kill?
For years, ice damage has been associated with a gas
build-up that occurs just under the ice surface. Under prolonged ice cover,
oxygen is depleted from the plant that is still under very low levels of
respiration and microbe activity. This results in an accumulation of toxic
gasses that may result in death of the plant. Superintendents generally follow
the rule that Poa annua can survive under the ice cover for up to 60 days,
while bentgrass can survive up to 90 days. This rule is being revisited.
“There is a popular theory that if the ice remains on turf
for too long that you end up with dead turf,” said Dr. George Hamilton,
assistant professor of turfgrass science at Penn State University. “Why it
happens has not been shown or even if it happens because of suffocation. That
is why you see devastating ice damage only once or twice a decade. If suffocation
caused damage, people would get it every year because there are parts of the
country that get extended ice coverage all the time.”
While not all of his Poa annua data was available at press
time, Dr. Dave Minner at Iowa State University has found the same
inconsistencies in the first year of his two-year winterkill study.
“We had four inches of snow and four inches of ice on both
bentgrass and Poa annua for 60 days and it didn’t kill the bentgrass,” said
Minner. “It has slowed the green up and killed some Poa but more died under the
dry and open conditions.
Carbohydrates Could Be Key
Hamilton said his research shows that ice is far more likely
to cause damage if the plant has low carbohydrate levels.
“We looked at carbohydrate levels and we found a connection
between levels of carbohydrates and the ability of the plan to withstand
icing,” he said. “Stressed turf is more susceptible to ice damage.”
According to Interlachen Country Club superintendent Matt
Rostal in Edina, MN, going into winter with stressed turf may have been the
cause of the winterkill he suffered on several greens, despite using covers.
“We had the Solheim Cup last September and that’s usually
the time we are supposed to be getting everything healthy going into winter.
Instead I cut them as short as I ever do and kept them lean on fertilizer,
which was not preparing them for winter,” said Rostal.
Brendan Parkhurst at Cape Arundel Golf Club in
Kennebunkport, Maine, believes his greens were damaged more severely for the
very same reason.
“I think it had a lot to do with drought carry-over from
last summer,” he said. “We didn’t get a lot of rain in the fall so the plant
didn’t get a chance to heal up.”
Solutions Are Few
As the research continues, new theories are being developed
and the impact of individual weather events is becoming more and more clear.
However, with so many variables involved, it will take many years of on-course
experience to ever develop a fail-safe strategy to reduce winterkill damage.
A superintendent’s strategy should include Nature Safe
fertilizers. Nature Safe contains carbohydrates that increase the turf’s
ability to survive the stresses of summer for a healthier turf this winter. Now
is the time to get on a year-round program to help safeguard turf against
summer stress and future winterkill and snow mold challenges.
According to a Golf Course News Poll, 62.1% of superintendents experienced winterkill this year.