Thursday, July 25, 2024

Tales of Cotton Insects: Thursday July 25, 2024

The cotton insect situation is as it has been all year, all over the board. Reports from South Alabama are that plant bugs are finally beginning to build in many fields but continue to be the heaviest near corn. Overall, bug pressure has been light in Central Alabama, but the bug complex (stink bugs and plant bugs) are beginning to be more common in some fields. Pressure is also picking up in some areas of North Alabama.

Bug Complex

 In some fields, plant bugs are easily found above threshold (3 per 5 row feet) and dirty blooms are apparent. This makes for an easy treatment decision. In other fields, numbers have been just below threshold for a couple weeks and the call is more difficult. In many cases, we have recommended “cleaning up” these fields. Conducting research on subthreshold populations is difficult, but I believe multiple weeks of numbers just under threshold will result in similar losses to one week of populations at threshold. Depending on planting date (or really age of cotton) insecticide options vary. In fields in early bloom, Transform is still a good option, however, fields at the 3rd week of bloom or later need a material that also cleans up stink bugs. That means a pyrethroid or organophosphate. A few things to consider for decisions are rain patters, variety and efficacy. We observed ≈10% damage from bollworms in our Non-Bt cotton at the Prattville research station this week. While overall pressure was low in our Bollgard 2 (DP 1646) cotton, consider a pyrethroid for bug control to get the additional bump on bollworms.

Overall, stink bug damage has been light across the state, but our observations on research farms and in grower fields in central Alabama is that stink bugs are just now beginning to infest older fields. Threshold during peak bloom is 10% internal damage of 10-12 day old bolls (1 inch diameter, about the size of a quarter). Sample 20-25 bolls across a field and look for signs of feeding.

Aphids

The aphid fungus has caused populations to crash in many areas of the state. Before treating for aphids, look for the grey, fuzzy looking cadavers. The fungus is highly effective and will crash populations across a field in a matter of a few days.

Rainfastness Considerations

While some fields are still pretty dry, many are receiving rainfall pretty consistent. Rainfastness of insecticides has been a common question over the past couple days. Several factors impact the effectiveness of an insecticide application after a rain event.

In general, most insecticides are “safe” after about 6 hours. If a rain event happens 3-4 hours after an application, I would consider a reapplication. If rainfall happens 4-8 hours after, I would scout the field 3-4 days later to determine efficacy and treat accordingly. Two insecticides that are “exceptions” to the rules are Diamond and Acephate. Diamond has better rainfastness (≈2 hours) than most insecticides (Miss State Blog). Many of the insect growth regulators (like Diamond) have good rainfastness. On the other side, Acephate is among the least rainfast materials we have. At least 8 hours of no rain is needed, and up to 12 hours is better.

Amount and Intensity of Rainfall: More rain will intuitively have more impact than less rain. A hard, driving rain will probably be more detrimental than a slower, steady rain. In other words, a half inch in 30 minutes will probably be worse than a half inch in 3 hours.

Activity of Insecticide: Systemic insecticides (move inside the plant) are less likely to be severely impacted than contact insecticides. Most systemic insecticides require 2-4 hours to move into the plant. While some contact insecticides aren’t very rainfast, insects may come into contact quickly and have enough exposure immediately following the application to die.

The question remains, should you go ahead and “beat the rain” or hold off until it passes. That can be a difficult one to answer. Action will depend on how bad the infestation is, how likely the rain is, and how quickly you can get back into the field. If plant bug populations are well above threshold (3-4x threshold), I would consider taking the risk of wash-off and partial control vs allowing them another week to feed if I could not get into the field.

Soybeans

Things have been relatively quiet on the soybean front, outside of kudzu bug. This has been the worst year of my career with kudzu bugs. Many fields reached threshold for adults and needed treatment. In general, we do not recommend treating adult kudzu bugs, however populations were so high they could not be left unchecked. Kudzu bug feeding causes similar impacts as drought stress in soybeans. Many dryland fields across the state could not take the additional stress of kudzu bugs during a droughty period. We have observed reproduction in south and central Alabama and have even seen some naturally occurring fungus taking out kudzu bugs in central Alabama. We typically wait to trigger on nymphs and use a threshold of 1 nymph per sweep (=15 in 15 sweeps). Most pyrethroids provide good control of kudzu bug.

Defoliating caterpillar and stink bug populations have been low thus far in soybeans across the state. We will continue to monitor the situation and provide updates as pressure builds.

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.

Monday, July 8, 2024

Tales of Cotton Insects: Monday July 8, 2024

Insect Pressure All Over the Board

Over the past week, we have received feedback from all cotton producing areas of Alabama. Adult plant bugs are still infesting some fields with nymphs showing up, while other fields do not have much, if any, plant bug pressure. Aphids are finally beginning to build, and spider mites are showing up in hot spots. Overall, insect management is a much of a field-to-field basis as I have seen in my career. Recommendations have been nuanced and rarely are the same from one call to the next.

Plant Bugs

North Alabama has experienced extreme plant bug pressure so far this year (both TN Valley and NE AL). Many fields received 2 adult plant bug sprays and some have received 3 applications. Overall, square retention remained above threshold (=80%) but continued infestations required multiple applications. Overall, the immature populations building in these fields has not materialized to heavy pressure yet. This is possibly due to a couple of reasons.

1.    Timely applications on migrating adults reduced egg lay. This is one reason why we recommend treatment if adult counts reach 8/100 sweeps, even if square retention is above 80%.

2.    I believe environmental conditions also play a role in the survival of plant bugs in the egg and early instar (hatchling) stages. The hot, dry weather we have faced over the past couple of weeks has likely killed many of the immature plant bugs that ordinarily would have hatched and developed over this time.

With all of this in mind, what does it mean for plant bug controls this week? For most of the older cotton, we are in the window where Transform (1.5 oz/A) has the best fit. Transform does a good job on adult and immature plant bugs, as well as aphids, without flaring spider mites. Traditionally, this is the window where we also recommend Diamond (6 oz/A) as a tank-mix partner to give residual suppression of immature plant bugs. However, this year, based on reports we are receiving, some fields may not need Diamond right now. Fields that received an initial adult plant bug spray in the first week or 2 of June still do not have either high numbers of immatures or many dirty blooms (a common symptom of immature plant bug damage). In these cases, we are recommending to “treat what’s in the field” and not make an automatic Diamond spray right now. Immature plant bug populations are too sporadic to make blanket sprays. That is not to say that Diamond is not or should not be going out in many fields, but our recommendations are on a case-by-case basis.

Aphids

As mentioned above, aphids are beginning to build across the state, and we have not received any reports of the fungus showing up. Aphids feed on plant juices and secrete a sugary substance called honeydew. This feeding slows down plant growth and development. This is exacerbated in situations where cotton is already not growing well, such as the hot, dry weather we have been experiencing. We do not consistently get yield responses when conducting efficacy trails for aphids, but we can see increased yields when cotton is drought stressed. In trials done across the southeast in 2019-20, Transform and Assail provided the most consistent control, while imidacloprid, Centric and Bidrin provided less consistent control, but enough to alleviate plant stress from heavy plant bug pressure.

In most cases, we do not recommend aphid treatments, and typically plant bug sprays “clean-up” any aphid populations. Populations will continue to increase until the naturally occurring fungus, Neozygites fresenii, takes over. Generally, populations crash about a week after these grey, fuzzy aphids appear.

Soybeans

A quick note on soybeans. Kudzu bugs have begun infesting fields in big numbers over the past 10 days or so. In central and south Alabama, reproduction is beginning to occur. In north Alabama, egg lay has not been observed. The presences of immatures is important, because this generally signals the end of adult movement into fields. Our threshold from R1 through R6 is 10 adults per sweep (250/25 sweeps) or 1 nymph per sweep (25/25 sweeps). If immature kudzu bugs are easily and repeatedly found on petioles and main stems during visual inspection of the canopy, treatment is likely warranted.

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.