1 / 47

Hessian Fly ID/Management in Wheat

Hessian Fly ID/Management in Wheat. Jack Baldwin Fangneng Huang Rogers Leonard Steve Harrison Ed Twidwell. Hessian fly Mayetiola destructor. Adults. There are 4-6 generations each year. A generation takes about 35 days at 75 º F, longer at cooler temperatures.

hasana
Download Presentation

Hessian Fly ID/Management in Wheat

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hessian Fly ID/Management in Wheat Jack Baldwin Fangneng Huang Rogers Leonard Steve Harrison Ed Twidwell

  2. Hessian fly Mayetiola destructor Adults • There are 4-6 generations each year. • A generation takes about 35 days at 75 º F, longer at cooler temperatures. • Development occurs between 40-80 º F

  3. Hessian fly eggs

  4. Hessian fly larvae 2nd stage (L) and 3 stage (R)

  5. Hessian fly puparia

  6.  puparia Larvae  R. Ratcliffe Photo

  7. Hessian fly puparia

  8. 1 2-3 3-4

  9. Hessian Fly In Wheat Fly damaged plants and/or tillers

  10. More dead tillers, thin stand

  11. Toxins in saliva cause stunting, plant death, yield and quality losses A thin stand of stunted plants (right) is a classic symptom of Hessian fly infestation

  12. Hessian Fly In Wheat John Van Duyn - NC State Randy Weisz – NC State Fly damaged plants and/or tillers

  13. Hessian fly damage looks different, depending on when the wheat was infested sometimes a wide leaf blade is a symptom. Often the wide blade has a blue-green hue.

  14. Hessian fly damage looks different, depending on when the wheat was infested early infestation results in stunting so leaf blades only partially emerge from the ground

  15. Infested tillers often die, particularly when subjected to cold stress in winter

  16. Hessian fly puparia

  17. infested in spring infested in winter?

  18. Hessian fly yield loss in winter wheat ↓ • Seedling early tiller stage: • 1 larva completely stunts and kills tiller • Cold injury • Jointing / Heading / grain fill stage: • Multiple larva per stems at joints • Stunts stem • Weaken stem cause lodging. • Reduces grain filling / test weight.

  19. Hessian fly yield loss in winter wheat • Seedling early tiller stage: • 5% - 8% infested tillers • Heading / grain fill stage: • 15% - 20% infested stems • 10% @ $7.00+/bu

  20. 1998 440-83K acres Ryegrass /winter wheat are common for food plots in southern “green fields”. 2007 613-228K acres

  21. Winter Wheat Acreage and Losses to Hessian Fly in Georgia (1972-2007) $28M         Hessian fly outbreak years

  22. Wheat Hessian Fly Management Summary for Georgia David Buntin Dept. of Entomology UGA – Griffin Campus 2008

  23. Hessian ‘fly-free’ planting dates to avoid fall damage

  24. Effect of Spring Tillage on Hessian Fly Emergence from Wheat Stubble(From Chapin et al. 1992. J. Entomol. Sci. 27:293) a ab bc c d

  25. Hessian fly Suppression (Wheat Stubble Management) • Plant as far away from previous year’s wheat stubble as possible. • Bury stubble to prevent emergence. • No-till = burn alone > disking > plow. • Burning stubble will not kill pupae. • Plant resistant varieties in previous years field.

  26. Control Volunteer Wheat No-till Soybeans with volunteer wheat Only important alternate host in GA is little barley, Hordeum pusillum DO NOT use susceptible wheat for wildlife plots or as a cover crop

  27. Hessian Fly Parasitism in Winter Wheat in Georgia – 1986/1987

  28. Plant Resistance for Hessian Fly Control

  29. When a population of Hessian flies overcomes the host plant resistance, it is called a biotype. Numerous plant resistance genes have been identified for Hessian flies. As they are deployed, new biotypes emerge. It is important to know what biotypes are present in order to choose the right Hessian fly "resistant" variety

  30. Hessian Fly Biotype Composition in Southern Georgia (1986-2000) ? Sources: R. Ratcliffe et al., USDA-ARS, Purdue Univ.

  31. Hessian fly biotypes 1996-2001 Roger Ratcliffe, now retired from the USDA Hessian fly lab Poplarville 1996 L, D, J Percent: Biotype L Biotype O Other

  32. Gaucho 600 0.8 to 2.4 fl. oz. / 100 lb Gaucho XT 3.4 oz/100 lbs seed Raxil & Apron fungicides Rate too low for HF Gaucho XT + Gaucho 600 @ 1 oz/100 lb seed Commercial seed treater Seed conditioner, dealer Cruiser 5FS (Wheat-Pak) 1 oz/100 lb seed Contains 3 fungicides Rate too low for HF Max. 1.33 oz/100 lb seed Karate Z (1.92 oz/A) @ 2-4 leaf stage. @ full tiller (early to mid March) Suppression; Timing difficult Insecticides for Hessian Fly Di-Syston 15G and Thimet/Phorate 20G are no long labeled for use on wheat.

  33. Hessian Fly Control by Insecticide Treatments (Plains, GA) * * * * * * *Significantly different from Untreated, P = 0.05.

  34. Early spring Hessian fly control with insecticide in fall infested wheat Treatments* Eggs/10 leaves** HF/5 plants*** Bu/acre • Warrior@2.6 oz 12.3 c 41.2 c 48.2 a • Warrior@ 3.8 oz 5.0 c 23.3 c 56.7 a • Warrior@2.6 oz 2X 8.0 c 16.2 c 58.1 a • Untreated 32.3 b 131.8 a 17.7 b * Sprayed 3/13; ** on 3/20; *** on 4/6 JVD

  35. Hessian Fly Management Tactics • Rotate wheat if possible. • Control volunteer wheat. • Do not use susceptible wheat as cover crops/wildlife plantings. • Conventional tillage (fall and spring). • Plant at recommended times. • Variety selection. • Plant resistant varieties (if possible). • Plant susceptible varieties ‘only’ in new fields. • Insecticides use strategies • Seed treatments • Lambda cyhalothrin - scouting for late winter suppression. For Grazing: only oats, rye, ryegrass.

  36. Questions?

More Related