Category Archives: Insects

Dealing with plant bugs during early bloom

Author:  Comments Off on Dealing with plant bugs during early bloom

Tarnished plant bug infestations in pre-flowering cotton have been pretty typical thus far … sporadic infestations with many but not all fields requiring at least one treatment. Realistically, I expect more consistent problems as we move through July. Below are a few thoughts about the best management practices for plant bugs over the next two weeks.

  • Consider using a sweep net and a drop cloth in tandem during early bloom. As we progress further into bloom, I prefer the drop cloth because the population often shifts primarily to immatures. However, the 14 days just before and after bloom is a time where we might see mixed populations of nymphs and adults knock off squares and feeding on small bolls.
  • Continue monitoring square retention in the top five nodes for 10-14 days after first bloom. Monitoring square retention after this point is generally not suggested for a couple of reasons. Later squares will not contribute much to yield. You can also get a ‘bad read’ as squares will naturally shed as the plant develops a fruit load.
  • Treat for plant bugs when infestation levels average 15 or more plant bugs per 100 sweeps or when 3 or more plant bugs per drop cloth. It is very likley a second spray will be needed at a 4-5 day interval if infestations are several times threshold, particularly when the population is composed mostly of immatures.
  • Use the right insecticide! We have several excellent treatment choices for cotton just prior to flowering and during the first two weeks of bloom. This is an good window for the use of 1.5 oz of Transform (1.5 oz/a) or Diamond (4-6 oz/a and usually tank mixed with Orthene/Acephate or Bidrin). Transform and Diamond provide unique modes of action. This is also a time where Acephate (0.67 – 0.75 lb/a) or Bidrin (5-8 oz/a) work well by themselves, although many will reserve the use of these products as tank mix partners with pyrethroids until later in the season when stink bugs and bollworms are a bigger part of the equation.
  • Don’t use the wrong insecticides. Pyrethroid insecticides applied alone will provide little or no control of tarnished plant bug. Also, I suggest laying off neonicotinoid insecticides such as Centric or the imidacloprid products once past first bloom, in part for resistance management but also because they just don’t work as well in this window as immature plant bugs are a growing part of the population.

Note – Bidrin is not labeled for use during the interval of first square to first bloom. Please follow the label restrictions for this and other insecticides.

 

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

New publication: Guide to Earliness Management in Short-season Cotton Production

Author:  Comments Off on New publication: Guide to Earliness Management in Short-season Cotton Production

Tennessee cotton is finally ‘growing off’.  Still, here on the 3rd day of July, it appears few farms will reach the coveted ‘bloom by the 4th’.  Although the environment has played a dominate role in maturity up to this point, management decisions emphasizing earliness have been particularly useful in 2015.  This marks the third consecutive year in which managing for earliness has a marked effect on crop maturity by early July. earliness_2015_TN

On the heels of last year’s delayed crop, Dr. Owen Gwathmey and I began discussing potential benefits of managing a cotton crop for earliness and the management practices which encourage timely maturity and harvest with colleagues both within and beyond the University of Tennessee.  We have summarized these thoughts in the attached Guide to Earliness Management in Short-season Cotton Production (PB1830)Continue reading

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Stink Bugs in Soybean

Author:  Comments Off on Stink Bugs in Soybean

I ran a similar article last year. Normally, stink bug infestations are worse in later planted soybean. They serve as a sink for bugs when other crops are maturing, and overall population levels have had all summer to build. However, we sometimes see high populations of adult stink bugs in soybean fields that are Continue reading

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Moth Trapping Reminder

Author:  Comments Off on Moth Trapping Reminder

Just a reminder that weekly moth trap catches in pheromone traps can be accessed by clicking on “Moth Trapping Data” under Quick Links on the left menu of our news site. This includes catches of bollworm (corn earworm), tobacco budworm, and southwestern corn borer. There is nothing exciting to report at this time, but be on a lookout for a spike in southwestern corn borer catches over the next two weeks. Over the past several years, this has occurred sometime between late June and mid July.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Insecticide Rainfastness

Author:  Comments Off on Insecticide Rainfastness

With scattered rains in the forecast and plant bugs in our cotton, the question of rainfastness always comes up. This most common question this year has been … should I use Acephate/Orthene to get rapid knock down of plant bugs before the rain hits? The short answer is not necessarily, and let me explain why. Continue reading

Print Friendly, PDF & Email