Weekly Field Crops Pest Report 2009
May 7, 2009 Volume 8 Number 3
2. Assess Alfalfa Stands for Brown Root Rot This Spring
3. Prevent Glyphosate-Resistant Lambsquarters
4. Start Scouting for Cereal Leaf Beetle
5. Early Season Corn Diseases!
6. Using NEWA to Determine Growing Degree Days
7. Alfalfa Snout Beetles Begin Spring Emergence
9. Alfalfa Weevil and Growing Degree Days in NYS
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View from the Field Ken Wise return to top |
This week I discovered a few clover leaf weevil larvae at the Cornell Research Farm in Valatie. They look similar to alfalfa weevil larvae but are larger with a light brown head and have a white stripe edged with pink that runs the down the back.
Clover leaf weevil Alfalfa WeevilFor more information about clover leaf weevil please view the Clover Leaf Weevil Fact Sheet from the University of Illinois Extension. There are many reports of winter kill in alfalfa this spring
across
For more information on this see last week’s weekly pest report for Alfalfa Winter Kill, Root Diseases and Frost Heaving article. Alfalfa weevil feeding has been observed in the central
Brain Aldrich (
Mike Stanyard (NWNY Dairy, Livestock, & Field Crops Team) also found cereal leaf beetle adults in spring oats. See article below on cereal leaf beetle management. Joe Lawrence (
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Assess Alfalfa Stands for Brown Root Rot This Spring Gary Bergstrom return to top |
If your alfalfa that looked great last October is slow to emerge this spring or if it has suffered apparent ‘winterkill’, brown root rot (BRR) may be one of the main contributing causes. Brown root rot, caused by the fungus Phoma sclerotioides, is a cold-weather disease affecting the roots and crowns of alfalfa during the dormant period when plants are not actively growing. April through early May is the best time to assess over-wintered alfalfa plants for the symptoms and signs of BRR. It is difficult to diagnose BRR in dead plants, but characteristic lesions can be discerned on the roots and crowns of plants showing slow regrowth of shoots from the crown buds in spring. You will need a good shovel or trowel to dig up plants and a bucket of water to rinse off adhering soil for a closer inspection. A pocket knife is useful for slicing through roots to determine the depth of lesions. BRR lesions vary in appearance, but they are generally light to dark brown, often with a darker border. BRR lesions that girdle the upper tap root or the crown result in winterkill. BRR lesions that girdle the lower tap root or affect just part of the root or crown, can lead to reduced plant vigor and slow emergence of alfalfa in the spring. You can be fairly certain that BRR was a factor in poor winter survival and reduced plant vigor when you see characteristic root symptoms on a high percentage of plants in early spring and there are winterkilled plants interspersed with slowly emerging plants in patches scattered across the field. The severity of brown root rot increases as the plants age and experience more winters. Absolute confirmation of brown root rot requires a molecular laboratory test that is recently available from the Cornell University Plant Disease Diagnostic Clinic for $40 per composite field sample. The result will be yes/no whether the BRR fungus was present at any level in the overall sample. We suggest you call the clinic at 607-255-7850 prior to submission of samples for diagnosis. First confirmed within
Figure 1. Range of typical brown root rot symptoms in alfalfa.
Note the light to dark brown lesions and the flaky epidermal tissues
within the lesions. Photos by Kent Loeffler,
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Prevent Glyphosate-Resistant Lambsquarters Brian Aldrich return to top |
Reports continue to come in of poor control of lambsquarters in fields where only glyphosate has been used in glyphosate-resistant soybeans and corn. Prof. Russ Hahn has been collecting seed from these escapes and growing them out in the greenhouse, where glyphosate was applied at various rates and heights. Based on these experiments and field studies, he emphasizes the importance of the height of the lambsquarters when it is sprayed, especially in total post-emergent programs. To better control lambsquarters in a one-pass system in conventionally tilled soybeans, spray glyphosate when lambsquarters is no more than three inches tall. If it is more than three inches tall, increase the rate of glyphosate, or tank-mix with 1/12th oz. Harmony GT XP or 1/12th oz. Unity WDG. To better control lambsquarters with a two-pass system, apply any of the following preemergents for residual control: 0.89 oz. Python, 1.5 pt. Linex 4L, 1.5 lb. Lorox DF or 2 pt. Prefix. Then apply glyphosate 24-30 days after planting. For glyphosate-resistant soybeans planted with no-till, if there is significant weed cover prior to planting, a burndown herbicide should be sprayed first. For better controlling lambsquarters in glyphosate-resistant corn, the introduction of Halex GT in 2007 provided a new option. Halex GT is a mixture of Dual Magnum and Callisto, designed to delay or prevent glyphosate-resistant weeds. This cocktail provides three different modes of action in the way it attacks the physiology of weeds. It’s less likely that any given weed species will be resistant to all three of these ingredients, which helps to prevent the development of resistance. Remember, Mother Nature loves it when we use the same practices every year, over and over, with no change. Consistency makes it easier for pests to find weaknesses in your defenses and exploit them. That’s why it’s important to change your pest control practices periodically, to throw the enemy off balance; otherwise, slowly but surely, they will find a way through your defensive lines! |
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Start Scouting for Cereal Leaf Beetle
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It is prime time to begin scouting oats and winter wheat for cereal leaf beetle eggs, larvae, and adults. Adults of the cereal leaf beetle are 3/16 of an inch long, and their wing covers are a metallic bluish black color, while their legs and front sections are reddish. Eggs are laid on upper leaf surfaces near the midrib. Eggs are elongate, 1/16 of an inch long, and yellow-brown. They are laid singly or end to end in short chains of 2 or 3 eggs. Larvae are about 1/4 inch long, rounded, and usually covered with a slimy black coating. Only one generation develops per year. Wheat is now in the stem extension stage of growth, and the flag leaves will emerge within a couple of weeks. Because the flag leaf is so important for grain development and head filling, CLB larvae will be especially damaging if they feed on the flag leaf. Larvae feed on leaf surfaces between leaf veins, giving the leaves a striped appearance. Heavy infestations give the crop a yellowish white or frosted appearance, but plants can sustain considerable damage before you see any economic losses. And timing is everything - serious feeding damage in the late head-filling stage does not typically cause economic losses. Careful field monitoring for numbers of larvae present is the only reliable way to determine if insecticide application will be cost-effective. Periodic monitoring should begin now and continue through early heading stages. To monitor a field, carefully inspect 30 stems throughout a field for the presence of eggs and larvae. The economic threshold is three or more eggs and larvae per stem before the boot stage, or one larva per flag leaf after the boot stage. If mostly eggs are observed, come back and scout again in about 5 days. Use of insecticides is usually not recommended because natural enemies, including beneficial parasitic wasps and predators (such as lady beetles) almost always keep populations in check. It is important to remember that if insecticides are sprayed unnecessarily or excessively, our allies, the natural enemies, will be killed before they can do their job. Overall, when sound agronomic practices are used to ensure a healthy crop, impact from cereal leaf beetle will be minimized.
Cereal leaf beetle adult Cereal leaf beetle larva |
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Early Season Corn Diseases! Keith Waldron return to top |
Early season corn seed and seedling diseases can reduce plant populations, thus reducing yields. Some expected yield losses can range from about 5% to 10%. If your average silage harvest is 20 tons/acre, a 10% loss in yield would be 2 tons/acre. The following is how to identify early season seed and seedling diseases: Seed Decay Seedling Blight To manage these diseases make sure a fungicide protectant is on the seed when it is planted. This will limit the disease’s ability to enter the seed or plant. |
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Using NEWA to Determine Growing Degree Days
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Temperatures have a great effect on insect activity, growth and development. Researchers have extensively studied the biology of some of our key pests in relation to heat accumulation from the environment, and thus we are able to monitor and predict the potential timing of development of damaging stages. One example of such a pest is the alfalfa weevil. In past years, we have provided growing degree day accumulation
tables for a few locations around
NEWA is NYS IPM’s network for environment and weather awareness.
It is a network of electronic weather instruments associated pest
forecast models, and radar weather forecasts. Weather and
pest data is relevant for farmers across commodities, from field
crops to fruit to vegetables. Data available include hourly rainfall,
temperature, leaf wetness, relative humidity, and soil temperature
readings. All of this information, as well as degree day accumulations
are available from almost 50 on-farm locations around NYS, primarily
in western NY, the Finger Lakes region, and the
NEWA Predictions for Alfalfa Weevil Be sure to bookmark these locations and check back as often as you need. |
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Alfalfa Snout Beetles Begin Spring Emergence Keith Waldron return to top |
Alfalfa Snout Beetle emergence time.... Alfalfa snout beetles (ASB) are root-feeding weevils found only
in nine northern
ASB adults are mottled gray, humpbacked, 1/2 inch long, do not fly,
and are all females. Adult alfalfa snout beetles leave fields void
of alfalfa this time of year en mass (by the tens of thousands)
in search of new alfalfa fields to lay their eggs. Once they find
a suitable location, ASB adults feed on alfalfa foliage and lay
eggs that hatch into root feeding larvae. While adult feeding can
trim the tops of alfalfa and other hosts, the vast majority of plant
death comes from direct root loss caused by ASB larvae feeding. Alfalfa snout beetle larvae are legless, white, and 1/2 inch long.
ASB larvae are found shallow in the soil when very small but move
deep in the soil during mid July to late August (18-24 inches).
In September the large larvae move back up to the top 8 “ and do
most of the tap root severing in September and October. After
development is completed, they then move deep in the soil to overwinter.
Larvae move deep in the soil in the fall after feeding (18-24”)
and remain there for the next 18 months. Midway through the
summer they pupate but remain deep in the soil until the following
spring. ASB damage in the spring looks similar to winter killed alfalfa
with plants failing to “green up”. Areas of dead alfalfa may also
indicate presence of brown rot rot. Alfalfa Snout Beetles in your neighborhood? In addition to alfalfa, other host plants for ASB include: red clover, dock, wild carrot, quackgrass, and white clover. ASB control is best achieved with a three year rotation of alfalfa with a row crop. Non hosts, i.e. good crops to have in rotation to minimize ASB losses include: corn, wheat, oats, soybeans, and potatoes. Insecticides are not recommended to control ASB. |
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Soybean Rust Update Gary Bergstrom return to top |
On April 24th, soybean rust was detected on kudzu in Gadsden
and Leon counties in
Soybean rust scouting continues in the Southern U.S. and
In 2008, soybean rust was found in 16 states representing 392 counties
in the
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Alfalfa Weevil and Growing Degree Days in NYS Ken Wise return to top |
Growing degree Days for peak (50%) Occurrence of Alfalfa Weevil growth stage:
(Note: for alfalfa weevil predictions use Base Temp of 48F)Note: Alfalfa weevil populations may be observed earlier on fields adjacent to overwintering habitat (hedgerows) that have a tendency to warm up more quickly such as those fields planted on light sandy soils, south facing slopes, etc. CURRENT Accumulated Growing degree days (48F Base) March 1 - May 6, 2009
*Indicates missing data |
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Clipboard Checklist Keith Waldron return to top |
General: Corn: Small Grains: Alfalfa & Hay: Pastures: Storage: Equipment: PESTICIDE EMERGENCY NUMBERS |
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Mark Your Calendars
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June 4, 2009 -- Small Grains Management Field
Day, Musgrave Farm, 1256 Poplar Ridge Rd, Aurora, NY |
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Contact Information
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Ken Wise:
Keith Waldron: NYS Livestock and Field
Crops IPM Coordinator |
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