Category Archives: Commodity

Virginia thrips update: adult numbers high, larvae still low

Just a short update on the thrips situation in Virginia cotton and peanuts – I have gotten several calls from growers and field scouts/consultants with questions about what the thrips are doing, and how the Temik and seed treatments are holding up given this strange season. It was very dry in April and early May to the extent that growers had to stop planting. This week that situation totally reversed itself with some areas (our research Center included) getting over 5 inches of rain. The rain has brought a lot of cotton out of the ground that had been sitting for several days in the dry soil, almost two weeks in some cases. In my plots, as in many growers’ fields, some plants had already emerged and are in the 1– to 2 –leaf stage, while others are just emerging. But the good news is that as of today, the Temik and seed treatments are holding well. I base this on the soapy-sample data (5 cotton seedlings per plot, 10 peanut leaflets per plot) from several tests we sampled this week.

In cotton tests (planted on May 4), Temik treated plots are averaging about 1.5 adults/5 plants and Aeris seed treatment plots are averaging about 2.5 – 3 adults/5 plants. This is compared to about 20-30 adults/5 plants in the untreated controls. So far, there are almost no larvae in any plots, but with these high adult numbers, we expect to see a lot over the next 2 weeks.

In peanut tests (planted on Apr 29), Temik treated plots are averaging about 1 – 2 adults/10 leaflets, compared with 15 – 25 adults/10 leaflets in the untreated controls. Larval numbers are also still very low, less than 1/leaflet even in the untreated controls. Again, these high adult numbers will result in large larval populations over the next couple of weeks.

But, for now, the in-furrow and seed treatments are holding. We are sampling some Avicta seed treated cotton plots later in the week so will have some of that data to share next week.

Update on cotton/peanut thrips situation

Until the rain last night (May 13), it was shaping up to be a worst-case-scenario for early season thrips pressure in Virginia cotton. With the prevailing dry conditions, and vacillating between unseasonably hot and cold temperatures, seedlings were either slow to emerge, or if emerged, were standing still. Slow growing plants have reduced root growth and are slow to pick up the systemic insecticides. Couple that with what appears to be, at least so far, a very active thrips population, and it was setting up to be a ‘perfect storm’ for thrips problems.
Last week we began to see adult thrips crawling on cotton seedlings and volunteer peanut plants (peanut seedlings emerging from last year’s crop in cotton, soybean and corn fields). We also set out a series of 3×5 inch sticky cards for monitoring adult thrips. We trapped over cotton and peanut fields, brought the cards in after 3 days, and counted over 100 adult thrips per card (counting both sides). A lot of them were not pest species, but there were plenty of tobacco thrips, our primary cotton and peanut pest. This week we sampled two peanut trials and one cotton trial for thrips (10 peanut leaflets per plot, and 5 cotton seedlings per plot)using our standard soapy-water sampling technique and found an average of about 1 adult and 0.1 larvae per plant in cotton, and 0.5 adults and zero larvae per peanut leaflet. These are very low numbers compared with where it will go from here, but shows that we are definitely at the beginning of what I call ‘Thrips Season’. We are already seeing evidence of thrips feeding damage on untreated cotton and peanut seedlings.
Last night’s rain, about 1 ¼ inches, fell across most of the cotton/peanut counties. Before that rain we were facing the problem of having fields with two crop ages. Cotton planted in rows where moisture was available is up and into the first, even second leaf stage. In areas of the same field where no moisture was available to seeds, plants are not up yet. A long gap between emergence dates results in plants being in different growth stages in the same field which greatly complicates thrips management decisions, that is, when to treat for thrips and where. The rain last night should go a long way towards clearing this up.

Late Blight Found in Maryland

I have just received a preliminary report of confirmed late blight infecting tomato plants in St. Mary’s County, Maryland. It is possible that plants from this greenhouse were planted in Charles County, Maryland. These two counties are in close proximity to Virginia and our growers near these locations (Eastern Shore, Northern Neck, Northern Virginia) should be proactive in making fungicide applications that target late blight on both potato and tomato. Fortunately, our prevailing weather conditions across the eastern part of the Commonwealth have been nonconducive for late blight development. As more details develop we will be able to more specifically give you recommendations. We will be sure to keep you up to date. Please pass this information along as you see fit.
Thanks
Steve

Late Blight Reported in Maryland

I have just received a preliminary report of confirmed late blight infecting tomato plants in St. Mary’s County, Maryland. It is possible that plants from this greenhouse were planted in Charles County, Maryland. These two counties are in close proximity to Virginia and our growers near these locations (Eastern Shore, Northern Neck, Northern Virginia) should be proactive in making fungicide applications that target late blight on both potato and tomato. Fortunately, our prevailing weather conditions across the eastern part of the Commonwealth have been nonconducive for late blight development. As more details develop we will be able to more specifically give you recommendations. We will be sure to keep you up to date.

Early Summer Row Crops and Vegetables Tour–Tidewater AREC, Suffolk, VA

We will be hosting the annual “Early Summer Row Crops and Vegetables Tour: Insects, Diseases, and Agronomics” at the Virginia Tech Tidewater Agricultural Research and Extension Center in Suffolk, VA on Thursday, June 3, 2010. The tour will begin at 9:00 am at the Hare Road research farm and lunch will be provided, courtesy of Berry Lewis with Bayer CropScience. Please see the attached brochure for more details. If you are interested in an equipment, company or agency display, please contact us. If you are a person with a disability and desire any assistive devices, services or other accommodations to participate in this activity, please contact the Tidewater Agricultural Research and Extension Center at 757-657-6450 (TDD number is 800-828-1120) during business hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. to discuss accommodations five days prior to the event. Additional information: jun3-brochure-pdf

Two new insecticides: Belay and Inovate

Valent U.S.A. Corporation has recently registered two new products for pest control in soybean and cotton in Virginia. Belay , has the neonicotinoid, clothianidin, as the active ingredient and is labeled for foliar applications to control aphids, plant bugs and stink bugs in cotton at 3 – 4 oz per acre, and is labeled for control of aphids, bean leaf beetles, Japanese beetles, leafhoppers, plant bugs, stink bugs and three-cornered alfalfa hoppers in soybean at 3 – 4 oz per acre. INOVATE, a combination of clothianidin and the fungicide, RANCONA (metalaxyl + ipconazole), is now labeled as a seed treatment for soybean to control early season insect pests and seedling disease. Belay has performed well in our cotton and soybean stink bug research trials. We have not evaluted INOVATE, but will be this coming field season. Contact us if you have any questions regarding these new options.