Monday, May 20, 2024

Tales of Cotton Insects: May 20, 2024

We have received several calls about thrips over the past 5-7 days. Right now, cotton planted in May is at the highest risk of thrips injury and cotton planted through about the 20th is at very high risk across most of the state. This has changed over the past week with all the rains we have received. One thing to consider is that a heavy rainstorm can alleviate some thrips pressure. However, they may not always do enough. On Saturday (May 18), we received a report from Cherokee county of multiple fields with anywhere from 2 – 6 thrips per plant on 1-2 leaf cotton (threshold is 1-2 with immatures present). Other reports are that cotton treated with AgLogic looks good and cotton with a seed treatment or imidacloprid in-furrow needs a spray. 

Note: All reports are that ThryvOn cotton looks as expected and is not taking on injury justifying a foliar spray.

The question is, what to spray. There are a couple of options for foliar treatments for thrips:

Acephate is an effective and relatively inexpensive option, however it has the potential to flare secondary pests such as spider mites and is the least rainfast of the available recommended options. (With the recent weather we have had, I am not concerned about flaring spider mites)

Bidrin is another option that is effective and less likely to flare spider mites and is more rainfast than acephate, however it is more likely to cause crop injury when tank-mixed with herbicides.

Intrepid Edge is another effective option. Intrepid Edge is less likely to flare secondary pests but may need the addition of a surfactant to help with efficacy.

Below is a chart with thrips counts and injury ratings from an on-farm trial we did in 2020 in Madison County (AL).

On-farm thrips trial in 2020. Cotton was treated with Gaucho (insecticide seed treatment). Foliar application was made at the 1 true leaf stage. Ratings were made 7 days after application. An injury rating (yellow line) of "3" indicates unacceptable injury













We are still receiving reports of grasshoppers threatening stands in central Alabama and the Wiregrass region. In some areas, we have a good stand but rain is keeping us out of the field for a few days. In others, the question has just been should we pull the trigger or not. In fields with historic issues of stand loss from grasshoppers and high numbers in the field, treatment should be considered. We don’t want to get into replant situations, especially in areas where we lost a few days in the field and are trying to get caught up. Acephate (2/3 lb) is needed to kill adults and in some fields nymphs are still hatching and Dimilin can provide residual suppression. Cotton is most susceptible in the "crook" stage, but grasshoppers can still threaten stands once it has fully emerged.

If we can be of any help, please don’t hesitate to reach out and let us know (Scott Graham: 662-809-3368; Ron Smith: 334-332-9501). To stay up-to-date on the Alabama insect situation, subscribe to the Alabama Cotton Shorts Newsletter, Alabama Crops Report Newsletter, and the Syngenta Pest Patrol Hotline.


Friday, May 3, 2024

Tales of Cotton Insects: May 3, 2024

The Alabama cotton insect situation has started to pick up over the last few days. We have received several reports of grasshoppers in fields across central Alabama. Our observations and reports are that grasshoppers have reached the adult stage in some of the fields, which is a little earlier than normal, but the winter was also somewhat mild. This is important to note, because adult grasshoppers are harder to kill and are not affected by the growth regulator Dimilin. The presence of wings is the only way to identify adult grasshoppers as the immature stages do not have them. We do not have a threshold for grasshoppers. With that in mind, treatment decisions are made based on the level of risk a grower is willing to take in a given field (how many grasshoppers are out there?). In some fields, grasshoppers do not eat cotton while in others they may destroy dozens of acres. Field history can provide some indication of what may happen this year. If grasshoppers have eaten cotton in a field previously, they seem to be more likely to do so again.

Treatment Decisions

At this point, I would probably assume adults are present in fields. That means acephate (0.67 lbs ai/A) is the go-to product. I would also tank-mix Dimilin (2-3 oz/A) to provide residual control of nymphs still emerging. Pyrethroids have provided poor to sporadic control of adult grasshoppers in previous years.

If we can be of any help, please don’t hesitate to reach out and let us know (Scott Graham: 662-809-3368; Ron Smith: 334-332-9501). To stay up-to-date on the Alabama insect situation, subscribe to the Alabama Cotton Shorts Newsletter, Alabama Crops Report Newsletter, and the Syngenta Pest Patrol Hotline.

Adult differential grasshoppers

Cotton seedlings damaged by grasshoppers