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Scouting for mid -season insects | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John Van Duyn, North Carolina State University, Entomology Extension SpecialistPrintable Version | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Leaf Feeding Insects. -- Cereal leaf beetle, grasshoppers, fall armyworm, and others may defoliate plants and cause concern to the farmer. In most situations defoliation may appear more serious than it actually is and will often be confined to the field borders. In these circumstances, visual estimates of the percent leaf tissue eaten is made in 10 spots within the affected area and compared to the appropriate value in Table 6-3 to determine the potential yield loss. If yield loss value is suitably high, treatment is warranted. Often only spot treatment is needed. Second Generation ECB. This procedure should begin after first generation moths begin to emerge and lay eggs. The moth flight can be determined with the use of pheromone traps or light traps. Commercially available traps and the pheromone bait can be obtained from the suppliers listed at the bottom of this section. At least three pheromone traps of the Heliothis (Hartstack) style should used on a farm since single traps can give misleading information; average trap catches from the three traps should be used to show moth flight trends. Although the traps are moderately expensive they will last several years and can be used to monitor several other moth insects. Generally, traps should be baited with New York strain (E race) pheromone east of Raleigh and Iowa strain (Z race) pheromone west of Raleigh, but in areas along this line both pheromones may be necessary (used in the same trap). Traps should be set into corn fields at ear level and checked at least twice weekly. When the traps show a sudden rise in moth catch number, scouting should be done in four to seven days later in pollinating fields or as soon as pollination begins thereafter. Typically, egg mass laying closely coincides with pollination in normal planted corn and few eggs will be deposited in fields that are not pollinating. Sources of pheromone traps and lures include: Great Lakes IPM 10220 Church Rd. NE Vestaburg, MI 48891 Phone (517) 268-5693 Fax (517) 268-5311 Gempler's 100 Countryside Dr. P.O. Box 270 Bellville, WI 53508 Phone (800) 382-8473 Fax (800) 551-1128
Thresholds for Second Generation European Corn Borer.
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Corn PageOther Resources
Return to Vernon James Center Publications PageThis page (http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/plymouth/pubs/ent/crscoutc.html) was created by John W. Van Duyn Ph D. Extension Entomologist, Wayne Modlin, Res. Tech. III.
Date Created 1/30/01.
Published by North Carolina Cooperative Extension ServiceDistributed in furtherance of the Acts of Congress of May 8 and June 30, 1914. Employment and program opportunities are offered to all people regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disability. North Carolina State University at Raleigh, North Carolina A&T State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and local governments cooperating. CAUTION: The information and recommendations in these Notes were developed for North Carolina conditions and may not apply elsewhere. |