Sugarcane Beetles Moving Into Louisiana Cornfields
No Foliar Control Agents Available
ST. JOSEPH, LA.
Sugarcane beetles are moving from the
sweet potato fields to the cornfield in
Louisiana. Dr. B. Rogers Leonard, Field
Crop Pest Management, Louisiana State University
explained the devastation. “We’ve been
seeing terrible injury in sweet potatoes recently.
It’s a massive pest. Some fields are almost unharvestable.
They literally have no controls for
this critter. It seems to have moved out into
cornfields, which is not a common host. We
even see some injury in sorghum and cotton. I
think these are consequential hosts; there is
just nothing else for the sugarcane beetle to feed
on at that point.”
Producers have had to replant but according
to Leonard, unless they go back into that field
with a higher seed treatment, they are going to
see the same injury. “It is an amazing insect in
that when it first flies into the field, it burrows
into the soil very, very rapidly. It is only a matter
of a few seconds that if you try to put any insecticide
out, that it would actually be
susceptible. It basically burrows under the soil
and moves from plant to plant.”
The sugarcane beetle is a subterranean feeder.
“It looks as if someone would take a spoon and
just carve out the side of root systems of a plant.
The injury is devastating. It literally kills the
plants outright or those plants will die back.
The remaining root system of the plant will
sucker out. That plant then becomes a weed. If
it does produce an ear, it is out of sync of maturity,”
explained Leonard.
“One sugarcane beetle per plant, or one
beetle could damage several plants in a
field,” added Leonard. “It is causing complete
stand loss. There are no foliar control
agents so you can’t stop the problem.
You can’t recognize how serious it is until
you go out and all of your plants are just
basically wilted down, you pull them up
and the root system has been destroyed,”
stated Leonard.
Leonard added seed companies are
working on increasing their seed treatment
dosage. “The seed companies have
gotten concerned enough about it. Pioneer
has recently put out a fact sheet on
this problem. Syngenta is gravely concerned
about it and are having discussions
now with a possibility of increasing
their seed treatment dose or working with
the dealer/distributor network to bring
those up. This has been a problem that
has been occurring. We are on the tail
end of it now, finishing up as you move
north. If we don’t get it in this year, and
certainly over the winter months, it is
going to be a very hot topic. It is causing
complete stand loss. The whole purpose
of seed treatment is risk management;
tools to try to maintain the plants in the
field. To lose plants in this manner, we
get in a serious bind. Corn acreage is
likely to maintain itself so this issue is
not going to go away in the mid-south.
Unfortunately for our farmers in the
south, sugarcane beetle is really a pest of
Louisiana, South Arkansas, Mississippi and
Tennessee. Very localized.” Δ
REGINA LAROSE: Associate Editor,
MidAmerica Farmer Grower
On the move! Dr. B. Rogers Leonard, Professor of
Field Crop Pest Management at LSU, notes the
movement of sugarcane beetles and their damage.
Photo by John LaRose, Jr.