Author Archives: Ames Herbert

Update on soybean insect pests: kudzu bug, brown marmorated stink bug, and corn earworm

We have found kudzu bugs, adults only, in three new counties, Pittsylvania and Henry Counties (in kudzu only) and Dinwiddie County (in soybean). These adults are the second generation. Adults are active and can fly long distances. The first generation developed to the south of us in either soybean or kudzu. We can expect more fields to become infested over the next several weeks and there is no way to predict for sure where these will be. I think most of our soybean acreage in Virginia could be at risk. The best way to sample for kudzu bugs is with the standard 15-inch diameter sweep net. Sweep the edges of fields first as they typically start there. Also, they seem to have a preference for beans that are flowering. If you find adults, don’t panic. The thresholds developed in the southeast are based on the capture of nymphs—an average of 1 nymph per sweep—so 15 nymphs in our recommended 15 sweep sample. Adults invade fields, lay eggs, and the nymphs hatch to begin feeding. So by waiting to make a treatment until nymphs are present means the insecticide will have the best chance of killing all stages and lasting—hopefully a single application. Spraying when adults, only, are present will most likely result in having to make a second application. Begin sweeping field edges, especially fields with flowering plants—and please report any catches to us so we can keep track of the occurrence and spread.

Brown marmorated stink bugs are slow to develop this year. I think this could be related to the extreme heat—they just don’t seem to like hot weather (don’t quote me on that). But we are not waiting. We started our survey program this week and a scout reported finding a few on the edges of one or two fields in Orange County, one of the areas that was hit hard last summer. We are going to increase our survey effort over the next few weeks and post all findings on this advisory.

Our field corn survey is not completed, but so far, most counties that have reported are indicating pretty high percentages of infested ears (50-60 percent in the southeastern counties). If conditions stay dry, we may have a pretty heavy flight into soybean fields. Adult moth trap catches are down this week—the quiet before the storm. We had a small flight earlier which resulted in a few worms in whorl-stage sorghum and an occasional worm in cotton and soybean fields, but this next flight from corn will be the big one. Because corn fields are variable in condition and maturity, the moth flight will most likely be sporadic and localized—heavy in some areas, lighter in others. The only way to determine if fields are infested worms is to scout them, especially once pods start forming. We will post weekly updates as more information comes in.

Update on cotton stink bugs

Most of our cotton is about 10 days to 2 weeks in to the blooming period. This is the perfect time to begin scouting for stink bug damaged bolls. We just completed 5 cotton field scouting clinics across our cotton region and it was not hard to find stink bug damaged bolls, and a couple of fields had high levels—30-40 percent internal stink bug damage. By the 3rd week of bloom, the threshold drops to 10 percent new damage and remains at 10 percent through the 5th week of bloom. These next three weeks (3rd, 4th and 5th weeks of blooming) are the most import time to scout and treat, if needed, cotton for stink bugs. Use the new cotton stink bug scouting card which provides the thresholds, scouting procedures and a template for determining the proper size of the bolls that should be used to make any treatment decision. If you don’t have one, contact your local Virginia Cooperative Extension Ag Agent—we will see that you get one.

Corn earworm (CEW) pyrethroid AVT update

We have tested another 166 moths since last week’s report and are seeing some improvement, maybe. This recent batch showed a drop to only 17.4 percent surviving the AVT challenge, making a 28.2 percent average survivorship for the seasonal 538 total tested—down a bit from the 31.2 percent survivorship reported last week. Before giving a sigh of relief, study the data from last season (see the attached line graph) and you will see an almost identical pattern with the same slight drop in early June of 2011 followed by a peak exceeding 50 percent survivorship. Stay tuned for more updates. We are also finding what appears to be a high percent of sweet corn ears infested (we pulled a bunch this week at the research center for our respective family 4th of July cookouts). We will be initiating our annual field corn survey soon which gives us the best idea of the size of the CEW population we will be dealing with.
Additional information: cew-cypermethrin-va-july-5-2012-pptx

Virginia Cotton Insect Scouting Schools—2012

Virginia Cooperative Extension Agents are hosting five Cotton Insect Scouting Schools this month. Ames Herbert and Jack Bacheler from NCSU (Windsor, VA meeting, only) will be presenting cotton and soybean insect pest status updates, management recommendations, and demonstrate scouting techniques. Contact the locale Agent for details.

July 16—10 am, Wakefield, VA, ET Drewery Farm (contact Kelvin Wells, VCE Agent, Sussex Co.,VA kewells2@vt.edu)

July 17—9 am, Ivor, VA, CPS Office (contact Chris Drake, VCE Agent, Southampton Co., VA chrisd17@vt.edu)

July 18—5 pm, Windsor, VA, Dairy Queen parking lot (contact Janet Spencer, VCE Agent, Isle of Wight Co., VA jaashle2@vt.edu)

July 19—10 am, Dinwiddie County, Lance and Randy Everett Farm (contact Mike Parrish, VCE Agent, Dinwiddie Co., VA mparrish@vt.edu)

July 19—6 pm, Newsoms, VA, Meherrin Office (contact Chris Drake)

Asiatic garden beelte in cotton and a few other comments

Nothing is really hot this week in terms of insect pests. We are seeing a few potato leafhoppers in peanuts but not heavy or widespread. We are concerned about the early results of our annual program for monitoring corn earworm pyrethroid susceptibility, but this issue is covered in detail in another of today’s advisories. In soybeans, we are hearing of more than usual numbers of fields with 3-cornered alfalfa hoppers girdling seedlings. This is a tough insect to make a call on in terms of when to pull the trigger. We have documented some feeding by Asiatic garden beetle in cotton (see attached image slide collection) in one county in the northern part of our cotton area. I noticed that Dominic Reisig at NCSU commented on seeing some of the same in his state. This is a new pest of cotton and we do not know much about it. If the damage is limited to the adults feeding on leaves, we can handle it with some fairly decent guesses as to how much leaf feeding seedlings can tolerate before a treatment is needed. If you view the attached images, you will see some seedlings in the infested area were completely striped of leaves. Will this slow these plants down? Hard to say. This damage will likely not be as damaging as the feeding by thrips that concentrates on the developing bud. But we also know that Asiatic garden beetle grubs can do significant amounts of root feeding. Are they feeding on cotton roots? Would the common cotton insecticide seed treatments offer any protection? All good questions with no immediate answers. This outbreak does tell us that we should be more vigilant when it comes to scouting cotton fields during the period from post-thrips to early squaring. Additional information: asiatic-garden-beetle-cotton-king-queen-va-2012-pptx

Corn earworm moths already showing high levels of pyrethroid resistance in Virginia

As of the end of this week (June 29, 2012) we have tested 372 corn earworm (CEW) moths for pyrethroid susceptibility and have a season average of 31.2% surviving the AVT (adult vial test) challenge (see the attached line graph). We had one sample with over 40% survivorship. These are high numbers for the beginning of the season and compare pretty well to what we had at this time in 2011, if not a bit higher. What does this tell us? We cannot claim ‘pyrethroid resistance’ based on this kind of random survey of moths, but historically, when we see survival numbers of about 25-30% or higher, we can expect some pyrethroid control problems, especially if moth fights are heavy, and the weather turns dry. That combination would almost guarantee control problems. But, if CEW populations reach only low to moderate numbers and the season continues to get plenty of rainfall, field failures will not be nearly as common. With loss of Larvin, an effective non-pyrethroid for controlling CEW, growers will need to turn to other non-pyrethroids like Belt, Coragen (Prevathon**), Steward, or combinations that include a pyrethroid plus a non-pyrethroid either tank mixed (like a pyrethroid + Orthene) or as a product (like Besiege** which contains Karate and Coragen). (**note, the registration status of these products is not certain at this point)
Additional information: va-cew-avt-results-6-28-12-pptx

No big news to report on the insect pest front

We have finally passed through our roughest thrips pressure weeks, although we are still getting a few questions about Thimet burn in peanuts. Looking back, the consequences of the thrips pressure will vary a lot depending on where you are in the state. The southeastern most cotton areas typically sustained heavier pressure and had more plant damage. The pressure seemed generally less in the western areas. As mentioned earlier, pressure in cotton generally happened earlier and was much greater compared with peanut. Overall, peanuts sustained only light to moderate damage so yields may not be affected.
We are turning the page to start focusing on mid-season pests with a special interest in beginning to scout for kudzu bugs in seedling soybeans. Only a few have been spotted in Virginia. More on that as we progress. We are also expecting this to be a ‘stink bug’ year. Our generally warm wet spring and early summer conditions favor stink bug development. Our first indication that this may be the case is the large numbers of brown stink bugs being combined with wheat harvests. As they leave wheat fields, they will be hunting for other food sources moving through many crops including corn, soybean, cotton, tomatoes, etc., as the summer progresses. We are also gearing up for our brown marmorated stink bug soybean field survey. So far, only a few egg masses and nymphs have been reported from weed hosts. Soybeans will not be very attractive to them until plants start getting into the podding stages. More on that later.

Peanut thrips update–still increasing

Unlike cotton where thrips pressure has peaked, numbers are still increasing in peanut. It is hard to compare the numbers we get in these two crops as we sample very different amounts of plant material. In cotton we sample whole plants, but in peanuts, only unopened terminal leaflets…where thrips concentrate their feeding. In untreated peanut plots, counts have gone from zero (May 17), to 7 (May 24), to 18 (May 30) per 10 leaflet sample. The result is not pretty with damage ratings reaching 5 to 6 on the 0-10 scale. Treatments are not keeping up, generally, and few are holding plants below a 2.0-3.0 on the scale which is where I think we need to be for plants to achieve potential yields. There are a few decent treatments and we plan to share these results in more detail at the June 5 tour, and at winter meetings.

Cotton thrips update–still ugly

We call this ‘Thrips Season’ for a good reason. Although we seem to be coming down from last weeks peak numbers of immatures (about 120-150 per 5 plant sample), we are still getting about 35-40 per 5 plants. The insecticide seed treatments, regardless of source, which were providing decent levels of control last week have broken and now have immature counts as high as or higher than untreated controls. We did not apply any additional foliar sprays to these seed treatments as we wanted to evaluate what levels of control they provide, but we recommend that growers do…and suggested that last week was the right week to pull that trigger. With this kind of heavy thrips pressure, no products are perfect and few are really good to excellent. There are a couple of pretty decent treatments but we will share more details at our tour next week (June 5, 9 am EST till noon), and more at winter meetings. We plan to take these trials to yield…data that tell you what worked and how well.

Cotton and peanut thrips update

The cotton in our eleven research trials is in the 1st true leaf stage. We are rating these each week for injury (visual ratings) and numbers of adult and immature thrips (soapy water samples, 5 plants per plot). Numbers of immature thrips have more than doubled since last week, from a high of 40 immatures per 5 cotton seedlings last week to a high of 148 per 5 seedlings this week. These high counts are in the untreated plots and by comparison give us a good indication of how well the many treatments we are testing are working. Breaking it down a bit, the 148 count means that each 1st true leaf seeding has about 30 immatures feeding on the small bud. They must be standing in line to feed on the leaf cells. In general, the seedlings are still growing slowly so it is difficult to do accurate visual injury ratings—with only one true leaf to rate, just not enough plant material. So this week, we think the thrips counts give a better picture of how products are working, with the idea that by next week as plants push into the 2nd and 3rd leaf stages, treatment differences in levels of plant injury will begin to express.
Overall, foliar sprays alone (no seed treatment) of several products are providing some decent levels for control of immatures but not at the levels we think are needed to achieve cotton yield potential. We will provide more specific results soon, but one caution, as in the last few years, data show that we should avoid using pyrethroids. The treatments with the fewest number of immatures are the seed treatments followed by a foliar application. Several product combinations are working well. For example, in one trial the numbers of immatures in the better treatments range from 7 or less per 5 seedlings compared with 85 per 5 seedlings in the untreated control.
What are the recommendations? I think, based on the high numbers of immatures we are seeing this week, we may be at or near the peak. This is the best time to make that foliar application to minimize seedling injury. The results of that application will not be visible for 4-5 days, until the next leaf emerges, which should look normal, healthy, not crinkled or worse, blackened.
Peanuts are a different story. Over the last several years we have seen a trend where thrips numbers and injury to seedlings lags behind cotton by a week to 10 days. That is what we are seeing with untreated peanuts only showing the beginnings of the injury, at most a 3.5 on the 0-10 injury rating scale. This is compared to years when the injury can exceed 6 to 8 at the peak. Where cotton should be treated soon, peanut treatments could be delayed until the middle to end of next week.