Managing Crop Pests
UK Field Trials Reveal Methods For Overcoming Worms, Diseases
PRINCETON, KY.
Dr. Doug Johnson, Extension Entomologist
with the University of Kentucky at Princeton
Research and Education Center, reported
at the UK Wheat Field Day on the aphid
insecticide trials he has underway. A bit of barley
yellow dwarf had already affected the first
planting of the trials.
“These trials were planted really
early in order to make sure that I
get insects and disease transmission
to test,” Johnson said.
“Barley yellow dwarf is a group of
viruses that attacks grasses but
the viruses can’t move except
through aphids,” Johnson said.
“The aphids themselves that we’re
working with are not important in
terms of their feeding on this crop,
they just don’t do that kind of
damage. There’s five species we
usually work with and they’re only
important in moving this virus disease,
the symptoms of which can
include not only the yellowing and
purpling on the plant but stunting
as well. There’s no stunting in this
particular field so there was not a
lot of real early infection, but, generally
speaking, when you see
color in a leaf, particularly the flag,
that’s what we use to gauge it.”
When there’s a lot of real red
purplish color in it, that generally
means it was infected in the fall.
That’s the most important infection.
When you see leaves that
don’t look thrifty but they’re very
pale yellow looking then that’s
generally an infection which occurs
in the spring which is not
good but it’s much less important
than what occurs in the fall.
“Disease that occurs early has all
fall to develop, then plants go dormant
in the winter and the disease develops
again in the spring to damage the plant,” he
said. “Disease that comes in the spring only has
that short period of time to develop basically
from elongation through yield.”
Johnson said he has also been following two
additional fairly important things.
“The one that people have been tracking for the
most time is the flight of armyworm moths and
we’ve had the largest flight of armyworm moths
captured in our trap system here at Princeton
and also we have a new trap line in Lexington.
We’ve caught more moths in the first generation
that we’ve ever caught in any year since we’ve
ever been trapping and I forgot to look how long
that’s been but I know it’s been more than 13
years.”
A large population of armyworm moths is out
there. These are the “true” armyworms, not fall
armyworm or beet armyworm, the other forms
of the pest.
“It’s actual name is armyworm,” he said. “Obviously
we’re not worried about the moths, they
are just an early indicator, an early warning to
us that there’s a large population. We compare
that a couple of ways. We compare that to our
historic records and we use a five-year rolling
average that we call average or normal.”
There have been a couple of years where there
were known outbreaks and since Johnson
knows the moth capture size of those years, he
uses those as a comparison to gauge risk.
“That’s really all we’re doing is gauging risk,”
he said. “I cannot make a direct prediction and
the reason I can’t is because once the moths
mate and lay their eggs there are a lot of things
that can happen to the eggs and the caterpillars.
They can be eaten by predators, they can be
parisitized by parasitoid wasps, they can succumb
to fungus and virus diseases; so you see
lots of things can happen to the early stage of
the caterpillar which would allow for a very large
moth flight but result in a small caterpillar number.
So we can’t make a direct prediction but I
think it is fair to say that when you have moth
numbers as much larger this year than we’ve
ever had, that we’re at higher risk of having
some problems.
“We also have at the point of this field day, at
least three different areas in the state where we
have had treatable numbers of armyworms in
corn,” he continued. “So we know the caterpillars
are out there now, they’re probably not at
their peak number yet.”
Johnson expected that to happen the week of
the field day or the next week because of the
temperature regime. He advised that people who
are growing grass crops particularly small
grains, corn and hay for pasture or forage,
should watch for these insects.
“Actually small grains are not at the greatest
risk,” he said. “There will always be armyworms
in small grains; you give me enough time I’ll find
you an armyworm in a small grain field; but this
crop is getting closer to maturity. It’s large, it’s
robust; if it’s been well maintained, the worms
tend to be late on this, so I can’t say it won’t do
any harm. It can, but the chances of it compared
to corn are much lower. Corn is maybe our highest
problematic crop because it’s small and right
now it’s cool and wet so it’s struggling. It’s not
going to die but in a cool wet temperature these
insects are favored over the corn because their
physiology does better at cool, wet conditions
than corn physiology does. It allows them to
catch up a little bit.”
Also, corn that is planted into a weedy situation,
particularly grass weeds, will be more likely
affected by armyworms. These worms will eat
broadleaf plants although they don’t really prefer
them. Armyworms are really a grass loving
insect. The first places for farmers to check are
the grass forages.
“They’re not going to be a problem on alfalfa, or
on other broadleaf plants but they can be a
problem in grass forages,” he said. “They will not
kill the plant, because they’re deep rooted perennials
but they could possibly ruin the first cutting
or make the pasture unfit for early season
production.
While none of this may happen, Johnson feels
his duty is to share the information to make
sure people have a chance to look in their fields
to make sure, they either do or don’t have the
problem.
“Finding the problem at the right time when
the worm is not particularly difficult to control is
important,” he said. “Most of the insecticides labeled
for it will do a fine job. I don’t worry about
people getting control of them if they need it. I
worry about them putting control on when they
don’t need it which costs them a lot of money
and puts stuff in the environment we don’t need.
Also, I worry about not getting there in time,
putting a control on too late after the damage is
already done. Those are the risks that we’re trying
to avoid with armyworms.”
Johnson also discussed his involvement
with the small grain and soybean growers in
using aphid suction traps. “We’ve been looking
at a large number of aphids,” he said.
“Today obviously, I’m talking about the grain
aphids, but we also look for soybean aphids. I
share the information with my colleague, Dr. Lee
Townsend, who is interested in the aphids on alfalfa
and forage grasses. This has been new data
for us. To the best of my knowledge before this
project was started two years ago, other than observation
we’ve never had population data on
any of these species.
To some extent it’s simply backing up the theory
we already have about how they behave, particularly
in small grains. It pretty well verifies
what we thought we knew about what was happening.
In other cases it’s telling us a few new
things. We have, for instance, a peak population
very late in the spring here of the grain aphids
which I, frankly, didn’t think about and didn’t
expect to see.
“I’ve been talking to Dr. David Voegtlin at the
Illinois Natural History Survey, who does all the
IDs on this. He’s trying to get some background
on the biology because that means that even
though those aphids have been here there could
be a great redistribution of them out over the
crops. So if you had control of them before this,
theoretically, and all of a sudden they go
through a flight and go through redistribution,
you might have them again. I don’t know that to
be the fact, I just don’t know what that is, so
that’s a new factor.
“Also, we’ve identified the rice root aphid which
has never been proven to be in Kentucky before,”
he said. “We have now found it in both
years in Princeton and one year we just started
to trap in Lexington, so we do know that it is in
all the small grain growing areas of the state. It’s
particularly important because it lives mostly
underground, and you’ll hardly ever see it until
the symptoms show up.”
Johnson discussed some of the treatments
that are in the plots, however data on those were
only due in June or July.
“That will go into our research report and, obviously,
into our educational program over the
next year,” he said.
From reports from his colleagues in Tennessee
Johnson said cutworm problems could show up
on small corn.
“We have not seen a lot of difference in our trap
numbers here and we have not had a lot of field
reports with cutworms so that does not seem to
be the case for us now but it’s no question in
middle Tennessee where it’s a real problem,” he
said.
Readers in the central part of Kentucky may
have noticed the presence of a periodical cicada.
Those with new shade trees that have fruits,
particularly apples or grapes that are setting
new fruit, should be on the lookout. Δ
Reporting on the aphid
insecticide trials he has
underway is Dr. Doug
Johnson, Extension
Entomologist with the
University of Kentucky
at Princeton Research
and Education Center
Photo by John LaRose, Jr.