New Technologies Solve Problems
Less Refuge Acres, More Pest Control Boosts Crop Performance
MILAN, TENN.
New GMO technologies in field corn including
the stacked Bt traits was the topic of a
presentation by Dr. Sandy Steckel, research
coordinator of the University of Tennessee.
“The first Bt corn traits that were sold have a
single toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis which
gives excellent control of tunneling caterpillar
pests such as Southwestern and European corn
borers in corn,” she said. “We see a lot of Southwestern
corn borer here in Tennessee.”
The new GMO technologies have multiple Bt
traits. These are Genuity VT Triple Pro, Genuity
SmartStax and Agrisure Viptera.
“The Genuity traits are marketed by Monsanto.
Genuity VT Triple Pro has two Bt caterpillar
toxins plus one rootworm toxin and the
RoundUp Ready II trait. SmartStax is an eight-way
GMO stack,” Steckel explained. “It has
three Bt caterpillar toxins, three rootworm toxins,
as well as the Roundup Ready II and LibertyLink
herbicide traits; and the Agrisure
Viptera corn which gives us two caterpillar toxins
and Roundup Ready II also.”
One impact of these technologies is better control
of fall armyworm.
“The new Bt corn technologies provide better
control of fall armyworm in both the whorl and
the ear,” she said. “However, the biggest impact
the newer Bts are going to have is on corn earworm.
They provide excellent control of corn
earworm feeding in the ear, resulting in a reduction
in damaged kernels from this pest compared
with the older technologies.”
Another implication of these newer Bt technologies
is a reduction in the refuge requirements.
Tennessee is unique in that the state
has counties designated as “corn counties” and
“cotton counties. This designation is made because
cotton contains many of the same Bt
genes as are found in corn. With the older Bt
technologies, the requirement is for an 80/20
refuge in corn counties.
“That means you can plant up to 80 percent of
your corn in Bt technologies, but 20 percent
have to be a non-Bt hybrid planted as a refuge,”
she explained. “It’s 50/50 in the cotton counties.
The reason we have those refuges is because
we want a susceptible population of
moths coming out of those non-Bt crops to mate
with any potentially resistant moths which
might come out of the Bt. It’s all about insect
resistance management, to try to combat insects
developing resistance to these traits. The
new technologies are changing these requirements.”
Genuity VT Triple Pro, since it has stacked Bt
caterpillar toxins, has an 80/20 requirement in
all counties. The SmartStax is also 80/20 for
cotton counties, and only a 5 percent refuge requirement
in corn counties.
“The reason SmartStax is eligible for only a 5
percent refuge in corn counties is that it has
multiple Bt traits for control of caterpillar pests
and corn rootworms” she said. “Triple Pro has
one rootworm trait, so it still requires a 20 percent
non-Bt corn refuge.”
There is plenty of data showing excellent control
of corn borer larvae with both the older and
newer Bt technologies. This has translated into
yield benefits. “Consistently we have seen a definite
yield bump from having any Bt technology
over non-Bt, due to control of corn borers, and
especially in late planting scenarios.”
VT Triple Pro, SmartStax and Viptera have all
shown good control of corn earworm larvae and
significant reductions in kernel damage.
“I would think that we would see a yield increase
with these newer technologies because
we’re protecting those kernels on the ear,”
Steckel said. “However, in our trials we have not
necessarily found that. We have had limited
testing and you really shouldn’t judge anything
by just a few trials in a few locations. However,
when we looked at the new technologies compared
with the older Bt technology, we did not
see a yield increase even though the newer technologies
provide much better protection against
corn earworm and fall armyworm feeding in the
ear.”
Steckel said farmers should really pay attention
to hybrid performance overall.
“We might see more advantages on a later
planted crop where we tend to get more insects,”
she said. “There is the potential for a reduction
in mycotoxins or diseases that we might see in
those ears with the newer technologies because
ear feeding insects can passively spread diseases.”
She finds the reduced refuge requirements for
fewer non-Bt corn acres one of the big impacts
of the new technologies. However, there are a lot
of corn earworms that get funneled through the
corn crop every year.
“A lot of corn earworms come out of our corn
crop later in the season and infest our cotton
and soybeans, so if this new technology is
widely adapted we’re definitely going to see an
impact on overall earworm populations,” she
summed. “That could, in turn, impact these
other host crops.” Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower
New GMO technologies in field
corn including the stacked Bt
traits was the topic of a
presentation by
Dr. Sandy Steckel,
Research Coordinator
of the University of Tennessee.