Scott Blankenship, Kelly Ag and Chris Parker, Wiregrass
Research Center, Headland, AL, report a heavy outbreak of sorghum webworms on
grain sorghum in the Wiregrass region of Alabama. As many as 70 to 80 larvae
per head have been recorded. Pyrethroid insecticides have given poor control.
Other treatment options include: Belt, chlorpyrifos (Lorsban or generics),
Lannate, Sevin or Tracer. Growers should note the “days to harvest”
restrictions with the various insecticide choices. Webworm picture provided by S.
Blankenship.
Friday, September 6, 2013
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Final Insect Update of the Season
The Alabama row crop insect control season is rapidly winding
down. The few areas that still need attention for a few more weeks are as
follows. We need to protect bolls on June planted cotton from stink bug injury
until the bolls are approximately 25 days old. We still have plenty of time
left in the season to mature small bolls that are present from blooms the last
week of August. On soybeans, stink bugs continue to reproduce and feed on pods.
Late planted, June to early July, soybeans will be susceptible to stink bug
feeding for several more weeks. Stink bug adults will leave other crops when
they mature and seek out late planted soybeans as their last host before heading
for overwintering sites. I expect to see high numbers of stink bugs in many of
these late maturing soybean fields. The good thing is that one application to
economic levels of stink bugs in both cotton and soybeans made now should hold
populations below damaging levels for the remainder of the season. Stink bug
populations currently contain both the brown and southern green species. A high
rate of most pyrethroids on soybeans should give adequate suppression. Kudzu
bug adults are still present in many soybean fields but they are not as
numerous in most fields as they were back a month or so ago. Their numbers
seemed to have peaked in April and May planted beans back in the late June to
early August window.
Overall 2013 has been a light insect year in Alabama for
most species. A summary of what I have observed is the following. For cotton,
thrips were moderate to heavy. However, their movement from wild hosts to
cotton occurred in May instead of April. Therefore, their damage period
coincided with our mid-planting period cotton instead of the earliest planted
as happens most seasons. Plant bugs, aphids and spider mites were very light
overall. Bollworms and tobacco budworms were low to nonexistent, even in fields
of conventional cotton. I have conventional cotton on three research stations
spread across the central and southern areas of Alabama. One had to search very
hard all season to find a single larva or damaged fruit. Stink bugs were the
only cotton insect that occurred at damaging levels in most fields in-season.
In soybeans, Kudzu bugs were extremely heavy in many early
planted soybean fields. This was the first year that many soybean growers have
had to deal with the Kudzu bug. Others will likely have their first experience
in 2014. When all is said and done, I believe we will be able to handle this
insect with one, or at most two, well timed sprays. Late maturing beans will likely
still see a big buildup of stink bugs in coming weeks as other crops mature and
dry down. The foliage feeding complex of green cloverworms, velvetbean
caterpillars and soybean loopers have been very light in 2013. This follows the
most widespread infestations of the past 40 years last season. Podworms have
been very light in soybeans for the past two seasons.
This has been a very unusual year rainfall wise. This may be
the only season during my 41 years here as our Extension Entomologist where we
had too much rain.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Early August Insect Update
It has been a number of days since we last reported on
Alabama insects. So what has been happening? First of all, August has been
dominated early-on with little insect activity other than the bug complex in
cotton. Second has been the weather, we had sun yesterday, August 19, for the
first time in about 10 days. During this period, rainfall has been measured in
inches varying from low single figures to double digits, depending on the
location. Up to 4 inches in a 24 hour period has been common. This has resulted
in bridges and roadways being washed out and public schools closing during the
beginning of the fall term. Agriculturally wise, sprayers have been unable to
get into fields and aerial applicators are over booked. Fortunately, insects
have overall been low with just a few exceptions. The bug complex has been over
threshold in many but not all cotton fields. In the past few days the
caterpillar complex has built to damaging levels in soybeans. Some fields have
been sprayed by plane for the lep complex, primarily loopers and velvetbean
caterpillars. The heaviest infested fields are those where growers just preventatively
added a pyrethroid when they were applying a fungicide.
It has been my experience in research plots that an
application of a pyrethroid just prior to an infestation of foliage feeding
caterpillars is like throwing gasoline on a fire. We usually see much higher
numbers of soybean loopers where a pyrethroid application has been made within
the previous 10-14 days. My advice to growers is that if they feel they must
add something to their fungicide, just add 2 or 3 ounces of a product like
Dimilin which does not disrupt the beneficial insects.
Once we have a damaging level of foliage feeders the first
thing we need to do is to quantify the species present and the numbers. Five to
seven caterpillars per foot of row will usually result in 30% or more foliage
loss and therefore require controls. Treatment thresholds for sweep nets on
drill beans are not quite as well defined. However, 2 to 5 per sweep would
likely require controls. As to species, velvetbean, green cloverworms, corn
earworms (podworms) and stink bugs can all be controlled with a pyrethroid.
However, if many soybean loopers are in the mix, then one of the newer lep
materials will be required. These are, in chemical alphabetical order: Belt, at
2-3 oz.; Steward at 7 oz.; Intrepid at 4-6 oz.; Prevathon at 18-20 oz.; tracer
or Blackhawk at 1.5-2 oz. per acre.
One additional thing should be added about soybean looper
control, especially if application is by air. Looper eggs are deposited on the
lower leaves of the plant, therefore they infest the plant deep within the
canopy. As the larvae mature they feed upward through the canopy. In order for
any of the newer chemistry to be effective, the leaf containing the droplet has
to be eaten. Therefore, it may take several days to fully suppress a looper
population. It has been my experience that the surviving larvae behind application will be early
instar larvae found lower in the canopy. Most of these looper insecticides are
very rainfast and have long residual on the leaves, so don’t panic if you see a
few small loopers behind an application.
I will be on research farms for the next several days and will
get back soon if we see or hear of damaging levels of insects developing.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Stink Bugs Showing Up in Fields
Based on calls from consultants during the past seven days,
most insect attention on cotton in Alabama has now shifted to the stink bug
complex. This appears to be the appropriate thing to do since no other
widespread destructive insect is being reported and a high number of stink bugs
are being reported from all the major row crops. This began with wheat during
the spring months. Stink bug numbers later shifted to corn. High numbers have
been reported in recent weeks in peanuts, with increasing numbers being
reported in both cotton and soybeans.
If we back up and review the situation since the end of the
2012 season, this is as expected. Stink bugs built high numbers on soybeans
late last season resulting in a high level entering overwintering sites. This past
winter was mild and we did not have the excessive high temperatures or extended
drought this spring to limit a 2013 population build up.
This complex included both the brown and the southern green
species. In the more southern counties within Alabama, the leaf footed bug is
also in the mix. Leaf footed bug damage is identical to stink bug damage to
cotton bolls. The important thing here is that, control wise, they are more
like the brown stink bug. Phosphide insecticides do a much better job in
controlling brown stink bugs and leaf footed bugs than do pyrethroids. Growers will
need to keep this in mind as they select their chemical for treatment
decisions. In Alabama, escape bollworms on Bollgard and Widestrike cotton
varieties have not presented a big enough problem to select a pyrethroid over a
phosphate for stink bug control. Field monitoring between July 20 and August 10
will determine if that trend holds true for the 2013 season.
In a few weeks, as we begin to make more stink bug control
decisions in soybeans, we will have to work more with the pyrethroid chemistry
to suppress the brown stink bugs in the complex. Research trials across the
south point to bifenthrin as their superior pyrethroid for brown stink bugs in
soybeans. We can improve the percent control by using the higher labeled rates.
Back to cotton, here is how we suggest making treatment
decisions. First, select a minimum of 25 ten to twelve day old bolls that are
still soft to the touch and can be crushed by hand. Select more bolls from at
least two locations from larger fields. Crush these bolls and observe for
internal injury. Note, it may make this process faster by first separating the
bolls with external feeding signs from those that have none. First, crush the
bolls with external feeding only and determine the percent that have internal
injury. If a threshold is reached, then the remainder of the bolls with no
external feeding signs will not need to be crushed. Internal damage may consist
of one or more warts on the inside of the boll wall, damaged seed or stained
lint. Second, the decision maker needs to know how long that particular field
has been in the blooming stage. Most stink bug injury and loss is coming during
weeks three though five or six of bloom. This is the period when most
harvestable bolls are being set.
In Alabama, I suggest using a 10% internal damage threshold
during weeks three though six of bloom. An insecticide application will usually
suppress stink bug numbers for seven to ten days unless a field borders another
untreated crop with high numbers of stink bugs. If has been my experience that
stink bugs do not move rapidly across fields like plant bugs as they reinfest. The
first four to ten rows adjacent to corn or peanuts seem to get most of the
migration initially.
In our heaviest stink bugs years, cotton in the coastal
plains of the southeast have required up to four applications. Under most
conditions however, only two or three sprays may be warranted.
One last thing I will mention today is that, in the past,
stink bugs seem to cause more internal boll damage in wet seasons than in dry
seasons. That being the case, and unless the weather changes, we need to be
extra cautious of stink bug damage to cotton in 2013.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Update for the First Week of July
The Alabama cotton crop is growing rapidly resulting from
abundant rainfall from multiple thunderstorms that have occurred during the
last 10-14 days.
Insect wise things have been rather quiet on cotton but not the
case with soybeans which I will discuss later.
Tarnished plant bug numbers have not increased as rapidly as
expected in fields that I have observed. An occasional adult and or nymph can be
found, depending on the age of the cotton. Migrating adults went to the earlier
planted cotton first and have had time to now produce offspring. Cotton planted
on April 10 is now blooming in Autauga County, Alabama.
To my surprise, I’m finding as many adult southern green
stink bugs as I am adult plant bugs. We need to begin watching stink bugs in
early bloom cotton. As I have stated before, these stink bugs will feed on
thumb size bolls as soon as the dried bloom sheds. A huge stink bug population
is waiting in corn. These adults will migrate to cotton, soybeans and peanuts
as corn begins to dry down. This may be the largest population in corn that I have
ever observed. There seems to be mating pairs in every corn plant at our
research farms in Shorter and Prattville, Alabama this week. Most are the southern
green species with an occasional brown in the mix. That will be to our
advantage in a few weeks since the pyrethroid chemistry does a nice job
controlling the green species.
The other insect that is building on cotton is aphids. They are
clumped in terminals on occasional plants in numerous fields at present. These clumps
will spread field wide before natural diseases wipe out the population. I would
project that aphid population decline will not occur until around July 20.
The most intense insect pressure at present is Kudzu bug
populations on soybeans in select fields throughout the state. Ten to 50 adults
and over 200 immatures per plant can be found in many April planted beans. More
adult Kudzu bugs are moving into beans from Kudzu daily. Beans will have to be
scouted weekly for the remainder of this and future seasons. One to three
sprays may be needed to protect beans this season. This will open the door to
pod and foliage feeding caterpillars for the remainder of the season.
Information on the management and control of the Kudzu bug in soybeans has been posted in blog entries previous to this one and also on the Alabama Crops website (alabamacrops.com).
Information on the management and control of the Kudzu bug in soybeans has been posted in blog entries previous to this one and also on the Alabama Crops website (alabamacrops.com).
Monday, July 1, 2013
Kudzu Bug Q&A
by Xing Ping Hu, Extension Entomologist, Auburn University
What is a Kudzu bug?
The Kudzu bug is a small yellowish green lady-beetle-like insect. However, they are not a beetle, but a true stink bug with sucking mouths that sip the juice from plants.
They like to aggregate in clusters and release a very strong, foul odor that you can smell several feet away.
Kudzu bugs are also called lablab bugs, bean bugs, globular stink bugs, and bean plataspids.
Are they a new pest and where did they come from?
Yes, the Kudzu bug is a new pest for us in the United States. Many new people are being introduced to it every day. We will all have to learn the best ways to deal with it.
The Kudzu bug is native to Asia. Genetic markers indicate this bug was likely introduced from Japan.
When did they get here and how widely spread are they now?
It was first reported in Georgia in 2009 and spread to Alabama in October 2010. Since then, it has been spreading like wildfire. By the end of June, it has been confirmed in more than 430 counties across 9 Southern Region States. They are in all but 53 counties in Alabama right now.
How do they spread so rapidly?
Many factors aid in their fast dispersal:
Kudzu bugs are leguminous plant feeders. Their primary host is kudzu plants; that is how they got their name. Of the other leguminous crops, they prefer soybeans to vegetable beans and wisteria vine.
However, they must feed on kudzu or soybeans to be able to reproduce. It is common to see them aggregate and feed on non-legume plants in early spring and late fall when leguminous plants are not available.
If they have been in AL since 2010, why the sudden population outbreak in soybean crops this year?
During the first year of invasion, the population was basically limited to kudzu patches. However, because of the exponential growth, overcrowding populations started to move into soybean fields in 2012 and reached peak outbreak this year.
What is the pest status of kudzu bugs?
They were first considered a nuisance pest in residential areas, but are posing much greater threat than previously thought. In Asian countries, it is a serious pest of soybean and vegetable beans. Here in the United States, besides yield loss of soybeans, it poses threats to international trade of agricultural products to Central America, and is an urban nuisance.
What damages do they cause in soybean crops?
They are slow feeders, sucking plant juice and gradually drawing down a plant’s vigor. They do not eat holes in leaves and do not take bites from pods or seed.
When do kudzu bugs move onto soybean plants and how long they stay in soybean field?
It depends on whether you have early, middle, or later soybean crops and the climate. In 2013, we observed adults of an overwinter generation move to lay egg masses on early-planted soybean crops when they are about 1 ft tall. Nymphs appeared in late May and by the middle of June, nymph population had peaked across the entire soybean field. This was also the optimal time for control treatment.
You will see Kudzu bugs in the field until the soybean plants become unsuitable (not enough juice). Last year’s research showed that Kudzu bug population was greater in early-planted soybeans rather than later-planted soybeans. We are monitoring Kudzu bug population dynamics this year.
What is a Kudzu bug?
The Kudzu bug is a small yellowish green lady-beetle-like insect. However, they are not a beetle, but a true stink bug with sucking mouths that sip the juice from plants.
They like to aggregate in clusters and release a very strong, foul odor that you can smell several feet away.
Kudzu bugs are also called lablab bugs, bean bugs, globular stink bugs, and bean plataspids.
Are they a new pest and where did they come from?
Yes, the Kudzu bug is a new pest for us in the United States. Many new people are being introduced to it every day. We will all have to learn the best ways to deal with it.
The Kudzu bug is native to Asia. Genetic markers indicate this bug was likely introduced from Japan.
When did they get here and how widely spread are they now?
It was first reported in Georgia in 2009 and spread to Alabama in October 2010. Since then, it has been spreading like wildfire. By the end of June, it has been confirmed in more than 430 counties across 9 Southern Region States. They are in all but 53 counties in Alabama right now.
How do they spread so rapidly?
Many factors aid in their fast dispersal:
- Hitchhiking on vehicles, airplanes, shipments of products and equipment, and even humans
- They are strong flyers themselves, capable of flying at least a couple of miles
- They are attracted to white and lightly-colored surfaces
- Propensity to migrate
- Diverse and flexible life history and rapid population growth rate
- Availability of primary hosts – kudzu plants and soybean crops
- Most interestingly, the new finding in my lab shows a majority of the adult females become fertilized before overwintering. A single pregnant female can lay egg masses in a new location without the presence of male.
Kudzu bugs are leguminous plant feeders. Their primary host is kudzu plants; that is how they got their name. Of the other leguminous crops, they prefer soybeans to vegetable beans and wisteria vine.
However, they must feed on kudzu or soybeans to be able to reproduce. It is common to see them aggregate and feed on non-legume plants in early spring and late fall when leguminous plants are not available.
If they have been in AL since 2010, why the sudden population outbreak in soybean crops this year?
During the first year of invasion, the population was basically limited to kudzu patches. However, because of the exponential growth, overcrowding populations started to move into soybean fields in 2012 and reached peak outbreak this year.
What is the pest status of kudzu bugs?
They were first considered a nuisance pest in residential areas, but are posing much greater threat than previously thought. In Asian countries, it is a serious pest of soybean and vegetable beans. Here in the United States, besides yield loss of soybeans, it poses threats to international trade of agricultural products to Central America, and is an urban nuisance.
What damages do they cause in soybean crops?
They are slow feeders, sucking plant juice and gradually drawing down a plant’s vigor. They do not eat holes in leaves and do not take bites from pods or seed.
When do kudzu bugs move onto soybean plants and how long they stay in soybean field?
It depends on whether you have early, middle, or later soybean crops and the climate. In 2013, we observed adults of an overwinter generation move to lay egg masses on early-planted soybean crops when they are about 1 ft tall. Nymphs appeared in late May and by the middle of June, nymph population had peaked across the entire soybean field. This was also the optimal time for control treatment.
You will see Kudzu bugs in the field until the soybean plants become unsuitable (not enough juice). Last year’s research showed that Kudzu bug population was greater in early-planted soybeans rather than later-planted soybeans. We are monitoring Kudzu bug population dynamics this year.
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Friday, June 28, 2013
Kudzu Bug Management and Control in Alabama Soybeans
Ron Smith, Extension Entomologist, Auburn University
The Kudzu bug has become a major economic pest of Alabama
soybeans in certain fields throughout the state in recent weeks. Populations as
high as 50 or more adult bugs per plant were observed in early June. Some of
these fields now have 200 or more immature bugs per plant (late June). Calls
are being received from growers and field men in recent days from all over the
state.
Kudzu bugs are most highly attracted to early planted (April
and early May) soybeans. Beans planted later, for example following wheat
harvest, are much less attractive.
The primary question asked are when should soybeans be
treated and what insecticide should be applied. The second part of the question
is the easiest to answer. Most pyrethroid insecticides do a good job of
controlling Kudzu bugs. Working thresholds have been previously established by
entomologists in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. For pre-flower
vegetative beans a treatment threshold of five adults per plant is suggested.
After flower, a threshold of one immature per sweep, with a sweep net, is
recommended. As an alternative to sweep-net sampling, visual inspections of
insect density lower in the canopy will suffice. If immature kudzu bugs are easily and
repeatedly found on the leaf petioles and/or main stems, treatment is likely
warranted. However, these threshold guides may be modified slightly based on
the number of egg masses that are continuing to hatch.
Kudzu bugs have two generations per season on soybeans.
Adults move from Kudzu to early planted soybeans in the spring, deposit egg
masses and eventually die. The immatures then hatch and eventually become
adults after about six weeks and begin to deposit eggs for the next generation.
A limited number of Kudzu bugs may appear in beans season
long. The most efficient and economic use of insecticides occurs when an
application is made when the majority of the population in each generation is
in the immature stage. Some fields have already exceeded treatment threshold
and will likely require two or more sprays during the 2013 season. Fields with
lower populations may be able to wait until mid-July or later for a treatment.
Only one application may be needed in these fields during the 2013 season.
Applications made when a high number of unhatched egg masses are present may
have to be repeated within one to two weeks. Our goal should be to
strategically time these insecticide applications for maximum effectiveness.
Treating soybeans repeatedly at close intervals has not resulted in yield
increases over fewer well timed applications. The key point is for growers and
field men to focus on the peaks of immature Kudzu bugs as we move through the
2013 season.
There will be no way to economically prevent yield losses to
Kudzu bugs and minimize inputs without monitoring or scouting soybeans weekly
just as we have done in other row crops for decades. Kudzu bugs are not the end of the world for soybean production in
Alabama but they do create a new day. Pictures of adult and immatures are
available on Ron Smith’s blog http://alabama-insects.blogspot.com/.
Basic Kudzu bug information can be found at http://www.clemson.edu/extension/Kudzubugs/index.html.
Updates on the Kudzu bug status will be posted on the www.alabamacrops.com website. The Extension
Soybean IPM guide has recommendations for Kudzu bugs on page six http://www.aces.edu/pubs/docs/I/IPM-0413/IPM-0413.pdf. Also, there is a podcast now available here http://agfax.com/2013/07/01/first-time-with-kudzu-bugs-listen-up/.
Adults |
Egg Mass |
New Release Information on Kudzu Bug by Tim Reed
STATUS OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF KUDZU BUG IN
ALABAMA
The kudzu bug has been
“officially” reported to occur in 53 of Alabama’s 67 counties as of June 27.
Last year in the first week of June this invasive species had been reported in
15 counties. It is quite likely that this insect is now present in all Alabama
counties. Several counties have reported significant populations of kudzu bugs
infesting soybeans during June in Alabama in 2013 and numerous fields have been
sprayed.
LIFE CYCLE AND HOSTS OF THE KUDZU BUG
The time required for the
kudzu bug to develop from an egg to the adult stage is 6 to 8 weeks. The egg
hatches in about 5 days. The kudzu bug has been found on many plants but
presently the only host plants on which it is known to reproduce are kudzu,
soybean and wisteria.
ECONOMIC THRESHOLDS FOR KUDZU BUG ON
SOYBEAN
Thresholds for kudzu bugs
infesting soybeans continue to evolve as more information is gained from
research efforts. Southeastern entomologists are currently recommending that
growers consider using the following thresholds when making kudzu bug treatment
decisions: 5 bugs per seedling, until plants are one foot tall. Then,
the threshold will change to 10 bugs per plant for plants from 1-2 feet tall.
The established threshold of one nymph per sweep should be used for plants above 2 feet tall.
Plants should be sampled at least 50 feet from the edge of the field.
The reason for this is
that the adults have an extended migration period (6-8 weeks) and colonize
field edges first. If you sample the edges, chances are you will make a spray
decision too soon before the migration is over.
WHICH CHEMICALS ARE EFFECTIVE IN
CONTROLLING KUDZU BUG IN SOYBEANS
Multiple classes of insecticides have shown
activity on kudzu bugs. Insecticide treatments containing bifenthrin,
cyhalothrin, zetacypermethrin, carbaryl, or acephate provided greater than 80
percent control 2-5 days after treatment in insecticide efficacy trials
conducted in Georgia and South Carolina. Insecticides do not prevent eggs from
hatching. Growers actively treating kudzu bugs with broad spectrum insecticides
should consider using a preventive application of Dimilin (2 oz/acre rate) at
the R2/R3 growth stage for control of velvetbean caterpillars and green
cloverworms in July, especially in central and south Alabama which historically
have had higher populations of velvetbean caterpillars than north Alabama.
EFFECT OF PLANTING DATE ON KUDZU BUG
POPULATIONS IN SOYBEANS
Studies in Georgia and
South Carolina have shown that kudzu bug populations are higher on earlier
planted soybeans than on later-planted beans.
Tim Reed, Extension Entomologist, Auburn University
Monday, June 24, 2013
Insect and Crop Update for the Week of June 23
After going weeks with light to moderate thrips pressure,
damage was heavy on 4-7 leaf cotton in early June, especially in SW Alabama.
Cotton was growing rapidly but thrips damage on true leaves was showing heavy damage from about the 4th to 7th true leaf. (Peanuts also were taking heavy damage during this same period.)
The thrips window is over now and we need to shift our focus to spider mites, aphids and the plant bug complex which includes tarnished plant bugs, fleahoppers and an occasional clouded plant bug.
Mites are primarily found in the TN Valley region of North Alabama and some treatments were being applied last week.
I noticed the first aphids on April planted cotton in central Alabama last Friday (June 21).
Plant bug numbers (adults) were down last week but nymphs are beginning to appear in our earliest planted cotton (mid-April). I would suggest using a sweep net to sample adults for the next 2-3 weeks, depending on the age of the cotton. As we approach first bloom I would switch to a drop cloth and concentrate on the presence of immature plant bugs.
Also, field men should now be looking at pinhead square set. Fields surveyed on June 21 were setting about 90% of the fruit. However, some plants had up to 30% square loss at that point. I believe you will find that migrating adult tarnished plant bugs will seek out the earliest planted and most lush cotton fields. My thought is that this cotton provides the best shade from the 95 degree temperatures, and is the best host for plant bugs.
While looking for pinhead square set I noticed a number of white eggs, likely tobacco budworms. They would not be a concern now, but in the old days it would have created a real predicament. Spraying for plant bugs during a budworm moth flight would have been expensive and also put the grower on a treatment treadmill for the remainder of the season. Sometimes we forget how well we have it compared to the pre-Bollgard years.
On another insect – a few stink bugs are already present in cotton. Normally we do not worry about stink bugs until about the third week of bloom, when we have bolls that are 10-12 days old. However, when stink bugs are present at bloom they will attack thumb sized bolls as soon as the bloom tag sheds. Any feeding to bolls this size will cause the boll to abort. Therefore, fieldmen need to be alert for adult stink bugs in early bloom cotton as they monitor for plant bugs with a sweepnet. Stink bugs will not damage squares or blooms but will seek out these first small bolls.
Since some of our corn was planted later than desired, stink bugs will likely remain with that host until the post roasting ear stage when the kernels become hard. At that time we may have a large movement into other crops such as cotton, soybeans and peanuts.
One word about Kudzu bugs on soybeans. Numbers of adults are out of site on many of our April planted beans. In fact, adult numbers are beginning to decrease in some fields now but numerous immatures are present, which is the trigger we use to treat the field. Fieldmen who have not experienced this insect may overlook these immatures when they are small. They will be a clear to greenish color and very small after hatching.
Cotton was growing rapidly but thrips damage on true leaves was showing heavy damage from about the 4th to 7th true leaf. (Peanuts also were taking heavy damage during this same period.)
The thrips window is over now and we need to shift our focus to spider mites, aphids and the plant bug complex which includes tarnished plant bugs, fleahoppers and an occasional clouded plant bug.
Mites are primarily found in the TN Valley region of North Alabama and some treatments were being applied last week.
I noticed the first aphids on April planted cotton in central Alabama last Friday (June 21).
Plant bug numbers (adults) were down last week but nymphs are beginning to appear in our earliest planted cotton (mid-April). I would suggest using a sweep net to sample adults for the next 2-3 weeks, depending on the age of the cotton. As we approach first bloom I would switch to a drop cloth and concentrate on the presence of immature plant bugs.
Also, field men should now be looking at pinhead square set. Fields surveyed on June 21 were setting about 90% of the fruit. However, some plants had up to 30% square loss at that point. I believe you will find that migrating adult tarnished plant bugs will seek out the earliest planted and most lush cotton fields. My thought is that this cotton provides the best shade from the 95 degree temperatures, and is the best host for plant bugs.
While looking for pinhead square set I noticed a number of white eggs, likely tobacco budworms. They would not be a concern now, but in the old days it would have created a real predicament. Spraying for plant bugs during a budworm moth flight would have been expensive and also put the grower on a treatment treadmill for the remainder of the season. Sometimes we forget how well we have it compared to the pre-Bollgard years.
On another insect – a few stink bugs are already present in cotton. Normally we do not worry about stink bugs until about the third week of bloom, when we have bolls that are 10-12 days old. However, when stink bugs are present at bloom they will attack thumb sized bolls as soon as the bloom tag sheds. Any feeding to bolls this size will cause the boll to abort. Therefore, fieldmen need to be alert for adult stink bugs in early bloom cotton as they monitor for plant bugs with a sweepnet. Stink bugs will not damage squares or blooms but will seek out these first small bolls.
Since some of our corn was planted later than desired, stink bugs will likely remain with that host until the post roasting ear stage when the kernels become hard. At that time we may have a large movement into other crops such as cotton, soybeans and peanuts.
One word about Kudzu bugs on soybeans. Numbers of adults are out of site on many of our April planted beans. In fact, adult numbers are beginning to decrease in some fields now but numerous immatures are present, which is the trigger we use to treat the field. Fieldmen who have not experienced this insect may overlook these immatures when they are small. They will be a clear to greenish color and very small after hatching.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Kudzu Bugs Infesting Soybeans
Kudzu bugs (adults and immatures) infesting April planted soybeans on Auburn University research farm, Auburn, AL.
Immatures |
Immatures |
Adults |
Adults |
Monday, June 10, 2013
Insect Update on Cotton and Soybeans
As of 8:45 am Monday, June 10, all is quiet on the insect
front. Rainfall during the past week has given cotton a growth spurt. Youngest cotton
is 3 to 5 true leaves and overall has little thrips injury. Older cotton is at
the 5 to 9 true leaf stage. Many fields are between the thrips injury stage and
the stage where we begin to focus on plant bugs. This window is about 7 to 10
days long. Mid April planted cotton already has 2-3 pinhead or larger squares
and should be scouted for adult plant bugs. No aphids or spider mites have been
reported.
We will be conducting scouting schools in Autaugaville (central AL) and Headland (Wiregrass area of SE AL) this week. In addition to cotton and soybean insects (Kudzu bugs) we will also have presentations on cotton disease and resistant weed management.
Kudzu bug adults are attacking early planted soybeans in the Prattville, Tallassee and Auburn areas. At present our treatment threshold is 5 adults per plant.
We will be conducting scouting schools in Autaugaville (central AL) and Headland (Wiregrass area of SE AL) this week. In addition to cotton and soybean insects (Kudzu bugs) we will also have presentations on cotton disease and resistant weed management.
Kudzu bug adults are attacking early planted soybeans in the Prattville, Tallassee and Auburn areas. At present our treatment threshold is 5 adults per plant.
Friday, June 7, 2013
June 2013 Scouting Schools
2013 Alabama Scouting Shortcourses Announced
The following cotton scouting shortcourses will be conducted by Auburn Extension staff:
June 11: Autaugaville, Alabama, County Ag Center, Highway 14, for central and west Alabama
June 12: Headland, Alabama, Wiregrass Research and Extension Center, for southeast Alabama
June 18: Belle Mina, Alabama, Tennessee Valley Research and Extension Center, for northern Alabama
Cotton and soybean insects (description, recognition, life history and damage), seasonal occurrence, management recommendations and threshold levels will be discussed. Identification and scouting for cotton diseases will also be covered.
At the Headland and Belle Mina locations a special section will also focus on managing glyphosphate resistant weeds.
Commercial pesticide applicator recertification points will be awarded. Each program begins at 8:30 AM and will conclude after lunch with in-field visits.
Friday, May 31, 2013
Plant Bug Surveys in Wild Hosts
Historically, years of abundant spring rainfall resulting in
delayed cotton planting have been some of our highest plant bug damage years.
Plant bug damage can be more pronounced when the migration
of adults from wild host plants occurs prior to or about the time cotton is
setting the first pinhead squares (6th to 8th true leaf).
One reason for this is that when adult plant bugs feed on pre square cotton
they feed in the terminal or growing tip. This feeding can disrupt the
physiology of the plant causing abnormal growth (crazy cotton). This abnormal
growth can delay fruiting for several weeks.
On May 20, I surveyed one of the primary spring host plants (daisy fleabane)
for tarnished plant bugs in Alabama. On that date in Henry County (southeast
Alabama) I found that about one-half of the plant bug population was dark
(older) adults about ready to migrate to a new host. In past years, cotton is
about the only host that is attractive at this time of the spring. Most wild
spring hosts are now drying down. The remaining one-half of the population on
May 20 were immatures of all stages. This means that the migration to cotton
could be extended for a several week period which is common in wet springs.
On May 30, I made a second survey in the same area and found
fewer immatures but more light colored younger adults. This may indicate that
the older adults have moved to a new host already and some of the immatures are
now young adults. I made a second survey on daisy fleabane on May 30 about
80-90 miles farther north than the first one. In this survey I found that they
majority of the population was still immature. The fleabane was still greener
and fresher at this location which means the plant bug population was in
perfect sync with the host plants.
Only time will tell what this means in 2013. However,
scouts, consultants and field men should be alert for the presence of adult
plant bugs in cotton, and specifically late planted cotton, in the next 10-30
days.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Updates for Week of May 26th
Kudzu Bug adults depositing eggs in April planted soybeans in Barbour Co. (Eufala) on 5/28/13. Will wait for hatch to assess treatment needs.
Low level of cotton fleahoppers infesting 6-7 true leaf cotton at Prattville, AL.
Some controls still going out for adult grasshoppers in Central, AL. Stand loss detected from GH feeding on stems at or above soil line.
Mid May or later planted cotton with seed treatments should not need foliar thrips spray due to rapid growth of the plants.
Low level of cotton fleahoppers infesting 6-7 true leaf cotton at Prattville, AL.
Some controls still going out for adult grasshoppers in Central, AL. Stand loss detected from GH feeding on stems at or above soil line.
Mid May or later planted cotton with seed treatments should not need foliar thrips spray due to rapid growth of the plants.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Cotton Growing and Thrip and Grasshopper Treatments
Some of the April planted cotton is finally beginning to
grow since the nights have become warmer. April 17 planted cotton at Prattville,
AL now has 4-6 true leaves and is about 5 inches high. Thrips pressure is still
heavy enough to cause a moderate level of visible injury to true leaves when no
foliar insecticide was applied. Most cotton planted in April 2013 definitely
needed a foliar spray at the 1-2 true leaf stage. Plants that emerged after May
15 likely will not need this foliar application.
I have had several calls this week about making a
combination spray to target thrips and grasshoppers as an over the top
herbicide is applied. My comment was positive to do this but realizing that
some of the grasshopper population is now adults and will be difficult to
control without going to the highest labeled rates of whatever insecticides are
applied. I suggest staying with a lower rate and just targeting the thrips and
immature grasshoppers.
I will come back in a few days to look ahead at out next
potential cotton insect – tarnished plant bug. It has been my experience that wet
springs, with delayed planting, have the potential to be bad plant bug years.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Thrips and Cotton Update
A lot of cotton has been planted this week (May 13-17). This
is the first time many areas have been dry enough since early April. However,
believe it or not, much of central Alabama missed rains in the last weather
front and it is already too dry for seed to germinate.
Cotton that has emerged has not made much growth to this
point. Cloudy weather, cool nights and a moderate number of thrips has severely
hampered seedling growth. Based on my observations from monitoring four thrips
research trials, I would suggest that the cooler than normal temperatures,
especially at night, has done more to prevent seedling plant growth than has
thrips injury.
Thrips numbers have not been abnormally high. In fact, it
does not appear that the mass movement of thrips from grains and other wild
host plants have occurred yet. Thrips damage is moderate to heavy primarily due
to the fact that plants are not growing due to cool nights.
Cotton planted this week (May 13-17) should have better
growing conditions and grow off rapidly. If that is the case, thrips injury
will be minimal in spite of thrips numbers.
I would suggest that cotton emerging after May 20 will not
need a foliar spray to supplement seed treatments. My thrips trials planted on
April 10 did not emerge and put on a true leaf until more than 21 days after
planting. In this situation, much of the thrips control provided by the seed
treatments had dropped considerably before a true leaf even emerged.
The bottom line is that growing conditions, moisture and temperature are more important than thrips numbers or the type of thrips control a grower chooses.
The bottom line is that growing conditions, moisture and temperature are more important than thrips numbers or the type of thrips control a grower chooses.
Labels:
Alabama,
cotton,
foliar sprays,
temperature,
thrips,
weather
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Early Armyworm and Thrip Control
Armyworms, either true or fall, in whorl of knee high corn
in Mobile County. Pyrethroid is suggested for control.
Cotton planted April 10-12 at Prattville, Alabama is putting
on first true leaf bud this week. Remember thrips control with seed treatments
drop sharply at 21 days after planting (which with the cool nights in 2013) is
about the time that thrips control is really needed.
The best timing for foliar thrips control is when plants are
putting on the first true leaf bud. Acephate (Orthene or generic) is one of the
most effective treatments.
Our objective should be to push the plant to about the 5th
true leaf stage as fast as possible. We want the largest and healthiest plant
possible when we reach the 5th true leaf. For that reason, the
timing of a foliar spray is more effective at the 1st true leaf than
a spray at the 3rd, 4th or 5th true leaf.
Just remember that what we see as far as thrips injury above
ground is also happening below ground with the root system. We don’t want these
plants, with 1000-1500 lb. yield potential, to start off with a stunted root
system.
Follow me on Twitter for updates throughout the season @Ron_Smith23
Follow me on Twitter for updates throughout the season @Ron_Smith23
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Grasshopper Control with Winter Weed Burn Down
Several calls have been received from consultants, advisors
and Extension agents this week concerning grasshopper control. Reports indicate
that numerous early instar grasshoppers and nymphs are present in reduced
tillage fields that are receiving burn down herbicides. There are also reports
of large adult grasshoppers present in wheat in the southern area of the state.
Based on
experiences during the past 10 or so years, it is suggested that where
grasshoppers have been a concern in reduced tillage fields of seedling cotton,
the best time to control is when applying winter weed burn down.
Follow me on Twitter for updates throughout the season @Ron_Smith23
Grasshoppers
are a “risk” insect when cotton is in the seedling stage. With today’s seed and
technology costs at planting, we must manage this risk just as we manage our
in-season insects. I do not know of any established thresholds. This problem is
much greater in reduced tillage in the central and southern areas of Alabama.
The immature stage of grass hoppers are much easier to control in March and
April than the adults will be in May. Most all labeled cotton insecticides, at
the lower labeled rates, give good control of immature grasshoppers. Control can
be achieved for as little as 50 cents to $1.00 per acre with some chemistries
by mixing with the burn down herbicides. If that window is missed, broadcast
applications behind the planter would not be too late if planting in April.
The
addition of Dimilin, at 2 oz. per acre, would give residual control when
applications are made in March or early April. Dimilin would provide control of
later emerging grasshoppers or those that might migrate from field borders.
No
highly effective controls have been found for adult grasshoppers that may be
present in May. Cotton is susceptible to grasshopper chewing on the stalk, just
above the soil line, until plants reach the fifth to seventh true leaf stage.
More comments about early season thrips control will follow in a week or so.
More comments about early season thrips control will follow in a week or so.
Follow me on Twitter for updates throughout the season @Ron_Smith23
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