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Contents
Science Update
Some Texas Wheats Don't Bow to Hessian Flies

Hessian fly, Mayetiola destructor
(K4193-19)
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Two top wheat breeding lines for Texas resist the Hessian fly. One line has
two bonuses: high yield and resistance to leaf rust. Discovery of the fly
resistance by Agricultural Research Service scientists is timely because the
Hessian fly was first found in west-central Texas in 1997. Long a notorious
pest in the central plains, it entered the United States in the 18th century.
If the resistant lines continue yielding well and have other desirable traits,
growers may get new commercial varieties within 5 years. Until then, they can
consider available varieties such as 2180, 2163, 2165, 2157, and Pecos. These
resist the fly in west-central Texas and in Kansas. But growers need to weigh
their other traits, such as disease resistance and yield potential. In Texas in
1997, Hessian flies damaged 95 percent of the 48,000 acres of wheat in
McCulloch County alone, with a $2.45 million loss in yield, according to
estimates from a Texas A&M Agricultural Extension Service agent. Chemical
treatment is expensive, so resistant wheat varieties have traditionally formed
the main defense against the insect.
J. H. Hatchett, ARS-USDA
Plant Science and Entomology Research Unit, Manhattan, Kansas; phone (913)
532-4719.
Feeding Soil Microorganisms To Reduce a Water Pollutant
Conservation tillage can cut the risk that atrazine, a popular weed killer,
will reach groundwater. This tillage approach leaves some or all of the
previous crop's stubble on the surface. As the stubble decays, organic matter
builds in the top soil layer. Beneficial microbes that thrive in the
carbon-enriched topsoil can break down atrazine before it leaches into
groundwater. Agricultural Research Service scientists based in South Carolina
came up with the finding when they examined how various tillage practices
affect atrazine's fate in Iowa glacial till soils and South Carolina sandy
coastal soils. The research could lead to more environmentally friendly farming
practices. ARS scientists also study herbicide leaching and runoff at other
locations including Beltsville, Maryland; Tifton, Georgia; Ames, Iowa; Morris,
Minnesota; and Stoneville, Mississippi.
Jeffrey M. Novak,
ARS Coastal Plains Soil, Water, and
Plant Research Center, Florence, South Carolina; phone (803) 669-5203.
Computer Program Helps the Bee Business Keep Buzzing Along
Beekeepers can turn to their PCs to manage the business more profitably.
BK-ECONOMICS ("BK" stands for beekeeping), a free computer program
available from Agricultural Research Service scientists, includes a spreadsheet
to track loans and equipment, labor, vehicle, and insurance expenditures. Plus,
it has a database component to help beekeepers market honey. The database holds
49 years of state-by-state honey values and average production from individual
bee colonies. This can help beginners determine how much honeyand
moneythey can expect. For example, beekeepers in Georgia can expect an
average of 50 pounds per year per colony; in California, 90 pounds. A colony is
two or more typical white boxes or hives, each containing nine frames of
honeycomb. The program also helps beekeepers locate apiculture specialists,
calculate loan terms, and simulate business expansion. This can help beginning
apiarists decide whether to buy or lease new equipment or to make do until
later. BK-ECONOMICS runs on IBM-compatible and MacIntosh computers and is
available through the researchers on 3-½-inch floppy disks.
Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman,
USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research
Laboratory, Tucson, Arizona; phone (520) 670-6481.
C Supplements Deter Cataracts
New findings confirm that long-term use of vitamin C supplements reduces the
risk of cataracts. Seventy-seven percent fewer early-stage cataracts appeared
in women who took the supplements daily for more than 10 years, compared to
those who didn't. Cataractsa clouding of the eye's lensare believed
to result from oxidation of proteins within the lens. Vitamin C prevents
oxidation. The study of 247 women was conducted by scientists at an
Agricultural Research Service-funded research center in Boston, in
collaboration with the Harvard University Nurses Health Study. Supplement users
took at least 500 milligrams of vitamin C daily, in addition to food and
multivitamin sources. The findings corroborate a 1992 report linking 10-plus
years of the supplements with far fewer cataract surgeries among nurses in the
Harvard study.
Paul F. Jacques,
Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts; phone (617)
556-3237.
"Science Update" was published in the January 1998 issue of
Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this issue's table of
contents.
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