Home News Livestock Crops Markets Hay, Range & Pasture Home & Family Classifieds Resources This Week's Journal


AgriMartin

High Plains Journal online store


2008 Farm Publication Editorial Poll

Place HPJ classified ad

Reader Comment:
by rita
"I don't think any orginization can make you as a person do anything you don't"....Read the story...
Join other discussions.

Defending cotton from stink bugs

Years ago, boll weevils used to bedevil cotton growers--until a successful large-area eradication program eliminated that problem for most U.S. producers. Now, stink bugs have begun to be another problem for cotton growers, costing them about 3 percent of their crop each year. Agricultural Research Service scientists in Georgia have been testing the effectiveness of using a combination of trap crops and pheromone traps to alleviate stink bugs' impact on cotton.

ARS entomologists Glynn Tillman in the Crop Protection and Management Research Laboratory at Tifton, Ga., and Ted Cottrell with the Southeastern Fruit and Nut Research Laboratory in Byron, Ga., are exploring this combination to control two troublesome members of the family Pentatomidae: brown stink bugs (Euschistus servus) and southern green stink bugs (Nezara viridula). Trap crops are small plots of plants specially planted to attract various pests away from cash crops. Pheromones are chemicals produced by an insect or other animal that stimulate a response in others of its kind, often serving as an attractant.

Planting peanut-cotton and corn-cotton farming configurations, or "farmscapes," is common in the Southeast. Stink bugs develop on corn and peanuts, and later they move into adjacent cotton fields when their food supply runs low. However, stink bugs are more attracted to sorghum than to cotton.

So the researchers planted sorghum as a trap crop in a strip along the entire length of the common boundary of a peanut-cotton farmscape and placed pheromone-baited capture traps about 45 to 50 feet apart in the sorghum. The brown stink bug population was significantly lower in cotton fields with the sorghum and pheromone traps than in those without them.

The researchers did the same for a corn-cotton farmscape with southern green stink bugs. Again, the southern green stink bug population was found to be lower in cotton fields with the sorghum trap crop than in cotton fields without it.

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.

Read more about this research in the January issue of Agricultural Research magazine, online at www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/jan08/pests0108.htm.

------CUTLINE------

The brown stink bug, Euschistus servus, is about 11 mm long. (ARS photo by Stephen Ausmus.)

5/5/08
None\3-A

Date: 4/25/08


Advertisement


Click for related articles Defending cotton from stink bugs
Insecticide approved for use on soybeans, cotton

Comments on Articles article 2008- 19 - Defendingcottonfromstinkbug.cfm

Article: Defending cotton from stink bugs

Add Your Comment
To post a comment on this story, enter your screen name and email address then click "Add Comment." Your email address will not be displayed.

77 Recommend | 0 Comments


Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source
Google
 
Web hpj.com
Copyright/Privacy
Copyright 1995-2009.  High Plains Publishers, Inc.  All rights reserved.  Any republishing of these pages, including electronic reproduction of the editorial archives or classified advertising, is strictly prohibited. If you have questions or comments you can reach us at
High Plains Journal 1500 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., P.O. Box 760, Dodge City, KS 67801 or call 1-800-452-7171. Email: webmaster@hpj.com



Market Snapshot

Inside Futures
Editorial Archives

Browse Archives

Defendingcottonfromstinkbug.cfm --->