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Latest Fungicides: A Practical Guide for Farmers on Fungal Disease Control
Arab farmers lose a significant portion of their crops to fungal diseases every year and the damage doesn’t always come from the fungus itself. It often comes from choosing the wrong fungicide. At Al-Qawafel, we see this repeatedly: farmers applying a preventive fungicide after a disease has already spread, or using a curative fungicide when prevention was what was needed. The result is always the same: lost effort, wasted money, and a damaged harvest.
This article is written for every farmer and agricultural engineer who wants to understand the latest fungicides available today how each type works, and how to confidently select the right fungicide for your field from the products available on the market. As always at Al-Qawafel, the information we share is accurate and built on the latest agronomic research.
Why You Need to Know the Latest Fungicides
Fungi are living organisms and they evolve. A fungicide that worked effectively ten years ago may have little to no impact on a new or resistant strain today. Using outdated or unsuitable fungicides creates a chain of problems:
Fungal resistance: Repeated exposure to the same active ingredient causes fungi to adapt and become harder to kill.
Crop loss: An ineffective fungicide means the fungus continues to spread unchecked.
Environmental damage: Older formulations often require higher doses, increasing harm to soil, water, and beneficial insects like pollinators.
Wasted money: You pay for a product that doesn’t work, then pay again for a replacement.
That’s why Al-Qawafel continuously tracks the latest registered fungicides in Arab markets and field-tests them before recommending them to our customers.
Al-Qawafel insight: Farmers who update their knowledge of fungicides every year reduce fungal crop losses by more than half.
A Practical Classification of the Latest Fungicides
To make fungicide selection straightforward, we divide them into three types based on their mode of action.
1. Preventive (Contact) Fungicides
Examples: mancozeb, copper oxide, micronized sulfur.
Think of these as a protective shield. They are applied to the plant’s leaves and stems before the fungus arrives. They prevent fungal spores from germinating or penetrating plant tissue.
Key characteristics:
- Applied before disease appears
- Coat the plant’s surface only they do not enter the plant
- Protection lasts 5–7 days
Use them at the start of the season, after pruning, or when conditions favorable to fungi are expected high humidity, fog, or heavy dew.
2. Curative (Systemic) Fungicides
Examples: tebuconazole, propiconazole, triadimefon.
Think of these as medicine that enters the body. The plant absorbs the active ingredient and transports it throughout its tissues, reaching the fungus even deep within the plant.
Key characteristics:
- Treat infection after symptoms appear
- Move through the plant with its vascular system
- Protection lasts 10–15 days
Apply at the first visible signs of disease on leaves or fruit. Don’t wait for it to spread.
Al-Qawafel warning: Do not rely on systemic fungicides alone throughout the season. Fungi build resistance to them quickly with repeated use.
3. Dual-Action (Combination) Fungicides
These are among the most advanced fungicides available today. They combine a preventive and a curative agent in a single product.
Examples: azoxystrobin + difenoconazole, tebuconazole + trifloxystrobin.
Advantages:
- Attack fungi from two different mechanisms simultaneously
- Significantly reduce the risk of resistance development
- Protection lasts 10–15 days
- Suitable for most situations, from early prevention to treating a mild infection
Fungicide Comparison Table
| Feature | Preventive | Systemic (Curative) | Dual-Action |
| Timing | Before disease | After symptoms appear | Before or at early stages |
| Movement in plant | Surface only | Fully systemic | Partially systemic |
| Protection duration | 5–7 days | 10–15 days | 10–15 days |
| Resistance risk | Low | Hoch | Medium |
| Best for prevention? | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| Best for treatment? | ✗ No | ✓ Yes | ✓ For mild infections |
Common Fungal Diseases and the Best Fungicides for Each
With 30 years of experience working across fields in 40 countries including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan our team has identified five fungal diseases that recur most frequently.
Powdery mildew: A white, flour-like coating on the upper surface of leaves. Best fungicide: micronized sulfur or mefentrifluconazole. Begin preventive spraying at the first rise in humidity.
Downy mildew: Yellow patches on the top surface, with grey or purple fuzz underneath. Thrives after irrigation and rainfall. Best fungicide: mandipropamid or metalaxyl-M (improved formulation).
Rust: Yellow or orange pustules on leaves and stems. Spreads by wind and can blanket an entire field rapidly. Best fungicide: tebuconazole + trifloxystrobin.
Early blight (leaf spot): Dark, circular, concentric-ringed spots. Particularly affects vegetables especially potatoes and tomatoes. Best fungicide: azoxystrobin + difenoconazole.
Root rot (sudden death): Sudden wilting, yellowing, and scattered plant death. Best fungicide: fludioxonil for seed treatment, propamocarb for soil application.
Prevention beats treatment. Sterilize your soil and treat seeds before planting.
How to Choose the Right Fungicide with Al-Qawafel
At Al-Qawafel, we don’t just sell a product we provide a complete solution that starts in the field and doesn’t end at the point of sale. We follow four practical steps with every farmer to ensure results.
- Accurate diagnosis: We send an agronomist to visit your field, or we ask for clear photos via WhatsApp, to identify the fungus type where possible, assess severity (mild, moderate, severe), and determine plant growth stage.
- Selection from an annually updated product list: We carry only the latest officially registered fungicides. Early-season prevention? We give you a preventive fungicide. First symptoms appearing? We give you a dual-action product. Disease spreading aggressively? We give you a curative fungicide and recommend rotating the chemical group after two applications. Near harvest? We recommend a short pre-harvest interval (PHI) product.
- A complete resistance management program: We specify spray timing, correct dosage per acre, rotation partners, and post-spray instructions (when to irrigate, when to fertilize).
- Field follow-up after spraying: We contact you after 5 days to check results. If improvement is insufficient, we adjust the plan immediately. After-sales follow-up is a core part of what we do.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are the latest fungicides safe for bees? Most modern fungicides are significantly less toxic to bees than older formulations. That said, the rule is clear: never spray during peak flowering. The best time to apply is after sunset, when bee activity is minimal. Always read the product label and look for the phrase “safe for pollinators.”
How many times can I use the same fungicide in one season? Do not use the same active ingredient more than three times per season at most. Preventive fungicides can tolerate up to five applications. Ideally, rotate through three different chemical groups across the season this prevents fungi from building resistance.
How do I know if the fungus has become resistant to my fungicide? The signs are clear: you spray at the recommended dose, symptoms improve for a day or two, then return worse than before within a few days. If this happens, switch immediately to a different chemical group and contact your Al-Qawafel agronomist.
Fungi evolve. Fungicides advance. Farming practices change. But the farmer’s need for accurate, clear information remains constant. At Al-Qawafel, we give you more than a product. We update the list of officially registered fungicides in your country every year. We offer free agronomic consultation before and after purchase. We write a customized resistance management program for your land. And we follow up with you regularly until you reach a successful result.
Don’t let fungal disease steal the fruits of your labor. Contact the Al-Qawafel team today at alqawafel.com, or visit your nearest branch. Tell us about your disease and crop type, and we’ll send you the right solution from the latest fungicides with clear instructions in your language.