Title: IPM for Sustainable Sugarcane
1IPM for Sustainable Sugarcane Production in
Florida
Gregg Nuessly Everglades REC-IFAS Belle Glade
2440,000 acres
3IPM of Florida Sugarcane Insect Pests
Grouped by Plant Damage Roots, Seed Pieces,
Tillers Stalks Foliage
4Insect Pests of Sugarcane Roots, Seed Pieces,
Shoots
Sugarcane grub - root feeder Corn wireworm -
root, shoot feeder Lesser cornstalk borer
(LCB) - shoot feeder
5Sugarcane grub Root feeding causes - reduced
vigor - lodging in storms - stool
dislodging during harvest
Larva
Adult
6Corn wireworm Shoot and seed piece feeding
causes - dead heart stand loss
Larva
Adult
7Lesser cornstalk borer Shoot feeding causes -
dead heart stand loss
Larvae
Adults
8Lesser cornstalk borer damage
Rows of holes
Feeding tube
Dead shoots
New shoot
9IPM for Pests of Roots, Seed Pieces and Shoots
Cultural Control - Disking cultivating
- kills and exposes them to natural
enemies - Flooding and rotation (Rice)
- soil type, season duration
10IPM for Pests of Roots, Seed Pieces and Shoots
Cultural Control - Weed control in fallow
fields reduces Summer egg deposits by
wireworm adults
11IPM for Pests of Roots, Seed Pieces and Shoots
Chemical Control - At plant treatment for grubs
and wireworms directed into furrows
when flooding or rice rotation is not
possible - Post emergence for LCB
12Insect Pests of Sugarcane Stalks
Sugarcane borer - leaves, mid to upper
stalks West Indian sugarcane weevil - lower
stalks
13Sugarcane borer
Stalk feeding causes - breaking, microbial rot of
stalk, reduced yield
Larva
Adult
14West Indian sugarcane weevil
Stalk feeding causes broken stalks, microbial rot
of stalks, increased rat damage, yield loss
Larva
Adult
15West Indian sugarcane weevil damage
16IPM for Pests of Stalks
Biological control - Cotesia flavipes,
parasitoid of sugarcane borer released in
1960s - Research by Dr. David Hall, U.S.Sugar
Corp., led to culture and mass production of
wasps
17Biological control of sugarcane borer
Cotesia flavipes
Adult
Larvae
18IPM for Pests of Stalks
Economic threshold used to initiate
treatments - Fields scouted for damage -
Sugarcane borer larvae examined for
parasitism - Cotesia wasps released in fields
as needed to augment natural levels of
parasitism
19IPM for Pests of Stalks
Host plant resistance - Breeding programs
(public and private) select for clones
resistant to insects and diseases - Some
clones much more susceptible to stalk pests
20IPM for Pests of Stalks
Chemical control - Insecticides applied by
air when late season damage is above threshold -
Recent registration of selective material
provides alternative that preserves natural enemy
complex
21Insect Pests of Sugarcane Foliage
Sucking insect pests - Yellow sugarcane aphid
- White sugarcane aphid - Sugarcane lace
bug Chewing insect pests - Armyworms -
Cutworms
22Yellow sugarcane aphid
23Yellow sugarcane aphid
Late season
Early season
Prolonged feeding leads to reduced stalk diameter
and yield loss
24Yield loss from yellow sugarcane aphid
25White sugarcane aphid
26White sugarcane aphid
Honeydew deposits and sooty mold fungus, but no
losses
27Sugarcane lace bug
Leaf feeding results in yellow and red
discoloration, large populations can lead to
premature leaf death
28IPM for Pests of Foliage
Natural biological control agents often keep
populations below damage threshold and respond
to outbreaks - Ants (incl. red imported
fire ants), earwigs, beetles, flower flies
and spiders
29Aphid predators Doru taeniatum Diomus terminatus
30Aphid predators
Olla v-nigrum
Coelophora inaequalis
Harmonia axyridis
Hippodamia convergens
Cycloneda sanguinea
31IPM for Pests of Foliage
Host plant resistance - Yellow sugarcane
aphids colonize and damage only small subset of
clones - Stage 3 clones now being evaluated for
resistance
32IPM for Pests of Foliage
Chemical control Broad spectrum
insecticides used as last resort to prevent or
minimize losses from foliage pests
33Summary
- Insect pests of roots, seed pieces, shoots
foliage - IPM in Sugarcane includes cultural
(incl. flooding rotation), chemical and
biological controls, scouting using treatment
thresholds, breeding program for host plant
resistance
34Summary
- Natural and augmentative biological control
agents important for maintaining insect
populations under economic thresholds