Title: Insect Pests of Grain Sorghum, Soybean and Sunflower
1Insect Pestsof Grain Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- Tom A. Royer
- Oklahoma State University
NCIS MPCI Crop-Hail Sunflower, Soybeans,
Cotton Grain Sorghum School August 23, 2006
2Insect Pests of Grain Sorghum
- There are many potential pests that feed on the
foliage and panicle. The results of their
activities can cause seedling death, lodging and
unfilled seed
3Insect Pests of Soybean
- In the past, there were few pests that caused
significant damage to soybean. In resent years,
several pests have mad their presence felt
throughout the soybean growing region.
4Insect Pests of Sunflower
- Sunflowers are native to North America, therefore
we have a wide variety of insect pests and their
associated natural enemies. - Damage occurs to the seedling, foliage, stalk,
developing head,and seed.
5Insect Pests of Grain Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- There are numerous pests of these crops, but I
will focus on the pests that can cause damage
symptoms that resemble hail damage
6Insect Pests of Grain Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- Seed/seedling feeders
- Stem/stalk feeders
- Foliage feeders
- Seed feeders
7Seed/seedling Feeders in Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- Wireworms would be a problem for stand
establishment in cool soils that delay rapid
early growth (early-planted crop). Feed on
germinating seed and newly emerged seedlings.
8Seed/seedling Feeders in Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- Seed corn maggots are a problem in cool soils
with higher organic matter. (early-planted crop).
Feed on germinating seed.
9Seedling feeders in Sorghum, Soybean and Sunflower
- Cutworms several species attack these crops
- Black cutworm
- Dingy cutworm
- Darksided cutworm
- Sandhill cutworm
- Many others
10Seedling feeders in Sorghum, Soybean and Sunflower
- Look for stand loss
- Look for weak, slow
- growing plants
- Slow growing conditions (cool weather)
favors cutworm damage - Follow-up with presence of insect
11Seedling feeders in sorghum
- Chinch bugs
- Adults 1/6 inches, black body and white wing
covers - Nymphs reddish-brown with band of white across
back - 40-day lifecycle
12Seedling feeders in sorghum
Feed in groups at base of plant, may often feed
below soil line, 7-10 bugs can stunt small
seedlings
Migrate from wheat, often see most severe injury
at edge of field
13Sorghum stalk feeders
- Southwestern Corn Borer
- More of a pest of corn, it occasionally attacks
sorghum - Hollows out stem, causing lodging. Not a major
pest of sorghum
14Soybean stem feeders
- Three-cornered alfalfa hopper
- Piercing-sucking mouthparts. It feeds and
circles around the stem effectively girdling it.
15Soybean stem feeders
- Soybean Stem Borer
- Longhorned beetle.
- Larva is damaging stage, tunneling in stem. They
overwinter below girdle, in stem.
16Soybean stem feeders
- Soybean Stem Borer
- Longhorned beetle.
- Larva is damaging stage, tunneling in petioles
and stems. They overwinter below girdle, in stem. - They also feed on giant ragweed, cocklebur
- Larvae tunnel downward, causes lodging on mature
plants - Damage often remains unnoticed because it occurs
so late.
17Sunflower stem feeders
- Stem weevils
- Sunflower stem weevil (Cylindrocopturus
adspersus) - Black stem weevil (Apion occidentale)
- Dectes stem larva
18Sunflower stem feeders
- Larvae feed on stem cortex, moving down stem as
they mature - Cause weakened stalks, particularly a problem
when harvest is delayed. - Can help transmit Phoma stem rot
19Soybean defoliators
Fall Armyworm
Corn earworm
Grasshopper
20Sorghum defoliators
- Fall armyworm/corn earworm
- Damages both whorl and panicle, but most often
seen in whorl - Control in whorl is generally not profitable
21Sunflower defoliators
Grasshoppers
Thistle Caterpillar
Sunflower Beetle
22Defoliators In SunflowerNature of Damage
- Pests that feed on foliage. Chewing mouthparts.
- Damage leaves, causing indirect damage to
sunflower yield - Reduce photosynthesis, slow growth, shift plants
emphasis to compensating for foliage loss - Probably information that would help with
assessing yield loss from hail.
23Sorghum seed feeders
- Corn earworm/Fall armyworm
- Damages both whorl and panicle
- When feeding on head, they will eat seed until
it passes soft dough.
24Sorghum seed feeders
- Corn earworm/Fall armyworm
- Damages both whorl and panicle
- When feeding on head, they will eat seed until it
passes soft dough.
25Sorghum seed feeders
- Sorghum midge
- Larvae feed for 7 - 9 days, total lifecycle is
about 2 weeks - Larvae completely destroy the seed
- Adults emerge, leaving white pupal case dangling
from floret and can re-infest late blooming
suckers or fields. Heads are blasted. - Johnson grass is alternate host do not
overwinter well in Oklahoma
26Soybean seed feeders
- Corn earworm
- Also known as podworm, feeds on foliage and
maturing pods - Occurs in mid to late season
- Can severely injure pods
27Soybean seed feeders
- Bean leaf beetle
- Overwinters as adult 1-3 generations
- Feeds on foliage and been pods.
- Most damaging to pods.
28Soybean seed feeders
- Stinkbugs
- Typical stinkbug shape, green about 7/8 to 1
inch long - Piercing-sucking mouthparts
- Lay barrel-shaped eggs, often coppery colored
29Soybean seed feeders
- Piercing-sucking mouthparts inserted into
developing pods - Cause shriveled, misshapen, and discolored seeds
that are lower in weight
30Sunflower seed feeders
- Head clipper weevils chew holes around the stem,
effectively girdling it. It breaks over, and
could be mistaken for hail injury.
31Sunflower seed feeders
- Sunflower midge is a pest, usually in the
northern plains, that causes the head grow in a
distorted way (folding, convoluted). It could
mimic hail damage under the right circumstances.
32Grasshoppers in Soybeans
- Grasshoppers will feed on pods, causing chewing
injury. This also allows entry for seed
disease-causing organisms.
33Grasshoppers in Sorghum
- Grasshoppers will feed on developing seed.
- Grasshoppers may be more of a problem in
conservation tillage because they may be laying
eggs in fields which wont be disturbed by
tillage. Eggs may survive better, hatch slightly
later, and grasshoppers may be more uniformly
distributed in the field.
34Grasshoppers in Sunflowers
- Grasshoppers are a sporadic problem in Oklahoma,
because they can build up in large numbers and
caused physical damage to the leaves and seed.
35Insect Pestsof Grain Sorghum, Soybean and
Sunflower
- Tom A. Royer
- Oklahoma State University
NCIS MPCI Crop-Hail Sunflower, Soybeans,
Cotton Grain Sorghum School August 23, 2006