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Title: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE OF MEXICAN CORN ROOTWORM AREAWIDE MANAGEMENT IN TEXAS

Author
item Hoffmann, Wesley

Submitted to: Entomological Society of America Regional Meeting Proceedings
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/22/1999
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: In 1998, USDA-ARS continued its effort on the areawide management of corn rootworm. In Bell County, TX (near Temple, TX), where the pilot study was in its third year, only 80 acres out of 2,700 acres of corn and milo reached treatment threshold and was treated. Local producers requested adding 1,800 acres into the management area, all which required adult control treatments. Additional pilot studies were initiated near Wharton (1,800 acres), Hondo (1,200 acres), and Dalhart (3,050 acres), TX. Approximately 600 acres in the Wharton area required treatment. These were all fields where corn was planted after corn. The insecticide application resulted in a greater than 95 percent reduction in Mexican corn rootworm (MCR) adults. At Hondo, good initial kill of MCR adults was obtained; however, there were some population increases about two weeks after treatment. The increases likely occurred when MCR adults moved from untreated dryland corn. At Dalhart, initial treatments effectively reduced Western corn rootworm adults; however, later treatments to two 500-acre plots only reduced the adult population less than 50 percent. The low level of control may have been caused by the misapplication of the insecticide. Additionally, the study fields may have received rain showers immediately after the treatment. Data compiled after the corn harvest revealed that there was significantly less aflatoxin in corn from the management area than outside the management area in Bell County. The Wharton pilot study data showed that there was a positive correlation between adult MCR trapped and the level of aflatoxin detected in the corn samples. Fields in Wharton with the lowest beetle captures also had the highest yields.