Corn Rootworm Resistance To Bt Seen In Iowa And Illinois
Missouri Grain Farmers Urged To Be On Lookout.
COLUMBIA, MO.
Wayne Bailey, University of Missouri Extension
specialist in plant sciences,
urges Missouri corn producers to keep
an eye out for indications of corn rootworm,
caused by continuous planting of Bt hybrid
corn on cropland.
Most of the corn planted in the United States
is Bt corn, and the Cry3Bb1 toxin is the major
one deployed in corn against rootworm.
Bailey will speak at the MU Crop Management
Conference, Dec. 18-19 at the Holiday Inn Executive
Center in Columbia. The conference is
sponsored by the Division of Plant Sciences in
the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural
Resources.
Research at Iowa State University that shows
evolving resistance in progeny of adult western
corn rootworms collected from northwestern
Iowa fields in which Bt hybrids that produce the
Cry3Bb1 protein had been planted for several
consecutive years. The pest has also been seen
in Illinois fields.
Bt hybrids used for corn rootworm control are
low- to moderate-dose events that leave survivors
in every field. When enough heterozygotes
survive and mate, a Bt-resistant population can
increase rapidly.
Bailey said there is no evidence of a problem
in Missouri yet, but some producers are concerned
because Illinois grain producers are seeing
it in some counties. He said less than 10
percent of the corn fields in Missouri are at risk.
Those at risk include fields planted in corn for
three or more continuous years, fields where
CryBb1 protein has been used, and those where
there is relatively high western corn rootworm
pressure.
He suggests that corn producers watch for evidence
of rootworms in spring fields. They can
slow growth of rootworm in fields by using soil
insecticides in furrow.
Producers who use Cry3Bb1 more than three
years should consider an alternate hybrid.
“Yes, you need to be concerned, but not real
concerned,” Bailey said. “Be vigilant.”
Bruce Hibbard, research entomologist for the
USDA Agricultural Research Service and a leading
expert on rootworms since 1986, has published
research documenting resistance to
Cry3Bb1 within three generations of selection.
He said producers “need options to control rootworms
and their options are becoming fewer because
of resistance developing in the field.”
Crop rotation provides the best defense
against rootworm, he said, but there are pockets
of farmland that are not in a rotation sequence.
This land would include land generally
dedicated to producing corn for livestock and
ethanol, and geographic pockets where corn has
been the only crop planted. “In some regions,
rootworm management options are limited because
of resistance to Cry3Bb1,” he said.
This past summer Hibbard began a small-plot
study at MU on rootworm and drought pressure
using a rainout shelter. He will continue the
study one more growing season before publishing.
Preliminary results suggest Pioneer’s
drought trait in combination with its rootworm
trait is highly effective when both drought and
rootworm are present.
For more information about the MU Crop
Management Conference, go to plantsci.missouri.edu/cmc. Δ