This post will describe the common diseases found on turfgrasses used for putting surfaces globally.
Disease: International Creeping Green Syndrome (ICGS)
Pathogen: This is the Latin name of the pathogen that causes the disease - humanus non charisma
Turfgrasses Affected: The list of the turfgrasses that are normally affected by this disease is far too long.
Occurrence: The exact time when a disease will occur is dependent on the environment, usually early morning after a night of little sleep or heavy drinking. The time of year when the disease is most likely to occur is during the summer. In many cases, diseases occur when the turf is not growing rapidly, usually due to optimal temperatures for outdoor parties. Under these circumstances, recovery from a disease will be slow. After all, to replace diseased leaf tissue the grass plant must produce new leaves Type I, or in some cases have them shortened Type II. Since there are distinct climatic variations throughout the world (north vs. south; coastal vs. inland), these variations should be considered when diagnosing the problem. The situations (ex: party night before, staff BBQ, long weekend) or stresses (vodka, beer, rum, whiskey) that will cause the disease to occur or make it worse.
Symptoms/Signs: There are two types of ICGS. Type I rings have a zone of dead grass just inside a zone of longer green grass usually the collar. Type II rings have only a band of dark green turf, with or without mushrooms present. Rings may be very small and skinny initially, less than 1-2 inches, but normally expand each year. It is not uncommon for rings to be 4o feet or more in diameter. The size and completeness (circular, semiquarter circles) of the bands varies considerably. Mushrooms will normally not be produced during the golf season but sometimes do appear. Since some of the mushrooms are poisonous or hallucinogenic, mushrooms should be removed, destroyed or dried and eaten in the off season best to consume prior to the clubs AGM. Chopping them up with the mower is adequate. Note it is possible to have both types occurring at the same time.
Cultural Controls: Cultural controls require that everyone involved with management of the turfgrass work together to solve or prevent the disease problem. Small paint dots at collar edge have been know to help, and probing for interface barriers ensures that the dots are in the correct place. Monitoring by the turf manager ensures accuracy.
Chemical Controls: Chemical control treatments (fungicides) are currently not available, due to human rights activist interference. Equipment companies are working on a solution incorporating GPS and robot controlled mowers.