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->Home > scouting > scnetwork > scnetwork09 Sweet Corn Pheromone Trap Network for Western New York, 2008
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This is a seasonal scouting report giving growers in the Western New York area information on the presence of sweet corn pests and recommendations on scouting and thresholds. The report is written by Abby Seaman, NYS IPM's Area Extension Educator for Vegetables. For 6/23/2009 European corn borer numbers are down from last week at most locations indicating that the first generation flight has peaked. Corn earworm was caught at a three sites this week, all fairly northern locations. This is early for corn earworm in western NY. Not all trap sites have corn earworm traps up yet, so we don't have a good indication of exactly where they may be present. Only one location caught caught enough moths to be concerned about treating. We'll get traps up at the other locations this week. Earworm are being caught in low numbers in north central Pennsylvania, but counts are high in southwest PA. As bare ground corn approaches tasseling, switch to our usual scouting practices and thresholds: Split field demonstrations have shown that applying insecticides to sweet corn for worm control before tassel emergence does not produce better results than waiting until the recommended tassel-emergence spray timing. In fields still in the whorl stage when eggs are deposited, larvae move to the whorl, feed on the foliage and un-emerged tassel, and are found feeding on the tassel when it emerges. Larvae feeding in the whorl are protected from insecticide applications and mortality will not be as high as at tassel emergence, when larvae feeding in the emerging tassel are exposed to the spray. Fields should be first scouted for ECB and FAW larvae at early tassel emergence. For corn borers, look down into emerging tassels for tiny larvae or frass (white to brown material about the size of fine sand), holes through the leaves in straight lines, or "windowpaning" damage, in which tiny larvae leave the clear lower epidermis of the leaf intact as they feed. For armyworms look for ragged feeding holes and frass pellets the texture of coarse sawdust. The threshold for ECB and armyworms at tassel emergence is 15% infested
plants. Larvae will leave the tassel as it opens up and no longer provides a moist, protected feeding environment, and move down the plant looking for protected places to feed. Insecticide applications need to be timed to kill larvae before they bore into a new feeding location where they will be again protected from sprays. In fields with very uneven development, two applications may be necessary, one when approximately 25-50% if the tassels have emerged, and again after 75-100% of the tassels have emerged, if the field is still over threshold. Once a field reaches the silk stage, the threshold drops to 5% infested
plants. Scout the ear zone (roughly from two leaves above and one leaf below
the ears) for ECB egg masses and ECB or FAW larvae. Egg masses are
found most frequently on the underside of leaves near the midrib, and consist
of approximately 10-20 flattened eggs overlapping like fish scales. Eggs
are white when first laid, turning cream colored after a couple of days,
and show the black head capsules of the tiny larvae through the surface
of the eggs when within 1 day of hatching (the "black head" stage).
Egg masses can also sometimes be found on the flag leaves of the ears or
on the husk itself. Eggs take approximately 100 base 50 degree days
to hatch. When temperatures are in the 70's during the day and
the 50's at night egg masses will take about a week to hatch. When
temperatures are in the 80's during the day and the 60's at night, they
could hatch in only 4 days.
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