A Proactive Nematode Treatment
Sample For Corn Nematodes, Plan Proactive Treatment
PERRYVILLE, MO.
Nematodes are having more of an effect on
corn plants in recent years, according to
Craig Abell, technical support representative
for Syngenta Crop Protection.
“As we look at cultural practices, we probably
have more reduced tillage, no-till, than we have
had historically and undisturbed soil makes a
pretty good environment for a nematode to live
and survive,” he said. “We have seen more of
them; as we go to a field and look at a crop and
see a plant that doesn’t look very good, we wonder
what’s affecting that plant. So after further
studying that we’ve realized that nematodes are
having somewhat of an impact on corn.”
The impact is greater than seen 20 years ago,
probably because farmers now rely less on
organophosphate insecticides.
“We see a trend towards more GMO plants
and also pyrethroid insecticides and so by utilizing
this technology we could see more nematode
pressure than we have in previous
years,” Abell said. He covers Illinois territory
from about I-80 down to about I-70/I-64, so for
all practical purposes he covers most of Illinois.
Abell said nematodes are somewhat of a
silent killer, one that the grower doesn’t readily
notice. It was commonly known that nematodes
were present in some of the lighter more
coarse textured soils of Illinois, but recent research
has shown the heavy black soils had
nematode pressure as well. It’s more widespread
than at first suspected. Generally the
farmers don’t readily think of nematode problems
in corn. They may not be aware of how
much damage their corn crop is receiving from
nematodes.
“A lot of people have the issue, or may have
the issue and may not realize it, and that’s
what we’re learning in the market as well,” he
said.
“They don’t think about nematodes. It’s
something they really don’t plan for and they
really don’t know it until the corn is at the
seedling stage; and in a lot of cases they might
see a pocket in a field where there is stunted
corn plants, they might be discolored and then
after further evaluation some stubby roots or
some malformed type roots may be discovered.
But it’s something that, until you do further investigation,
you really don’t notice it.”
The past three to five years more growers are
talking about nematodes. They have come to
more of a realization of their presence. Also
there has been more testing to evaluate the
nematode problem and more has been brought
to the press. So the grower that may have had a
crop that wasn’t living up to its potential may
have decided to look into soil sampling to see if
there is an issue. If the farmer misses the problem
in the seedling, there’s further deterioration
that appears later.
“The plants might continue to be shorter, you
might see nutrient deficiencies in the plant just
because the root system is affected, and then
the overall conditions, later in the season you
might see a smaller ear,” Abell explained. “So instead
of having a large robust ear, you might
have less rows around the cob and less kernels
on that ear. So a smaller ear would equate to a
smaller yield. That tends to occur in a pocket in
a field. There generally isn’t widespread damage
across an entire field.”
A pocket could be the size of a pickup truck or
two pickup trucks in a field, and there may be
two or three of those areas across the field.
However, generally it doesn’t spread uniformly
across a field.
“That may be a pocket where there is a visual
affect, but you may also have adjacent plants
that have no visual affect where the nematodes
may still be attacking,” he said. “The reason I
say that is because of the trial work I’ve done in
the past two years. In the trials, we would either
split a field or we would split a planter with half
the planter using Avicta treated corn and half of
it not treated. When we did those comparisons,
we saw a six to eight bushel difference in yield
between Avicta seed treatment versus the untreated
seed.”
Economically, Avicta Complete Corn is $15
net per unit incremental over Cruiser Extreme
250. Looking at economics today, with corn
fluctuating at about $6.20 a bushel, a six to
eight bushel difference can have an impact on a
farmer’s bottom line.
Abell said that farmers who notice a field or
even pockets in a field where the corn isn’t producing
as expected should be alarmed.
One issue affecting yield is night time temperatures.
Every night the low temperature is
above 70 degrees it can cause a yield loss of 1
bu/A due to increased respiration.
“If you can’t trace it back to a fertility problem
and you can’t trace it back to a cultural practice,
then it may be something to take a look at;
let’s take a look at a sample and see what kind
of nematode pressure you have,” he said.
To sample for nematodes, he suggests you
pull a soil core and basically do a composite
sample from the area that’s affected. The farmer
may do an affected area and he may do an area
where it may not be affected as well. That soil
core, taken four to six inches deep, should be
sent for analysis to a nematode lab, two of
which are the University of Illinois and University
of Nebraska.
A composite sample, he explained, would be
to take a soil probe and pull a number of samples
from that affected area, put them in a
bucket and, combine them. In a fourth of an
acre, a farmer would pull two or three cores
from that area; or maybe 10 samples in a 100-
foot square area.
Syngenta markets the chemistry for controlling
the nematode problem.
“It is a package, Avicta Complete seed treatment,”
Abell explained. “With that you get
Avicta which is a seed treatment nematicide;
you get Cruiser which is the seed treatment insecticide;
and you have three seed treatment
fungicides, Maxim, Apron XL and Dynasty as
well. So you get a package not only to control
your nematodes but also insects and diseases
that would have an affect on seedlings. So
Avicta Complete is the product and it’s something
that would be applied by the seed company
to the seed before you purchase it.”
Today’s seeds are treated for different pests.
“Every corn seed you purchase has a seed
treatment and most of the time it’s a fungicide,”
Abell said. “When you buy traited hybrids, those
are treated with a fungicide and an insecticide.
But as we look at the nematicide segment of the
market, that’s a relatively new area; I would say
we’ve really been on the market a couple of
years. However, it’s a rapidly growing segment
of the market too. So pretty much all seed is
treated and then as we get into the higher value
seeds we add the products to that,”
“Avicta is the only true nematicide on the market.
There are some other products on the market
that are repellents and you may run across
them; but Avicta is the only true nematicide on
the market.”
A map of the Midwest shows the northern tier
of states are substantially affected by nematodes,
however, Abell says the potential is there
for infestation in the southern tier as well.
“The company has done some sampling and
it’s much more widespread than originally believed;
you know, initially we thought nematodes
might be a southern Illinois, Missouri,
Kansas, Nebraska thing, but it’s much more
widespread.”
Nematodes in corn are different than those in
soybeans. With soybeans there’s the cyst forming
nematode.
“That’s not really the case we have here in
corn,” Abell said. “It’s a non-cyst forming nematode
that’s affecting the corn. A parasite is actually
penetrating the root. Then you have an
open lesion there where a disease can readily
attack the plant, so that’s why we sell it as a
package, so you can take care of diseases too.”
Farmers may notice on the yield monitor while
harvesting that a pocket in the field may not be
producing as it should.
“A lot of time if you’re sitting in a combine cab
and you see the drop in the yield monitor for
what seems like no reason, that’s another lookout
that there may be something else that can
be affecting yield,” he said.
While corn nematodes can be a challenge at
the present time, as minimum tillage is occurring,
more and more nematodes are appearing;
by using Avicta Complete, farmers can control
nematodes and have an added benefit of controlling
other pests as well.
“Correct! That’s one of those things as we look
at trying to maximize yield and maximize return
on an investment, nematodes, insects and diseases
are all three things that have a negative
effect on the crop; and if we can eliminate those
we can maximize the return on our investment,”
Abell summed. Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower