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Friday, May 29, 2020

Flowering Cotton

Photo: Kate Crumley
Cotton Bloom
Photo: Kate Crumley

Howdy,

  This week Stephen Biles and I put together an audio update on what we are seeing going on in our areas. If you are interested in checking that out, you can sign up to receive text updates when we post them on Thursday afternoons at this website https://www.texasinsects.org/signup-coast.html.

  It was pretty muddy in all three counties this week. Our insect pressure definitely dropped off this week, and I am glad to see a lot of flowers out there. Cotton is out of danger of economic yield reduction from fleahoppers once it starts blooming. This week I only saw one field still susceptible to fleahopper damage with any fleahoppers present. I found 16% in a field in Matagorda county near Tidehaven.

  I am still seeing a few different plant bug species around, though in lower numbers this week. I haven't seen a verde yet, but I've talked to consultants that have. The threshold for verde plant bugs is 20-25 insects per 100 plants with using a beat bucket. Verdes can feed on fruit up to bolls about an inch in diameter.

Nymph (A) and adult (B) of Verde plant bug, Creontiades signatus Distant (Hemiptera: Miridae), which causes lint and seed staining and deterioration, seen in green (C) and open (D) cotton bolls. https://ccag.tamu.edu/entomology/

  If you've still got fleahoppers, they are an insect that feeds on plant materials, and will feed on cotton squares. Keep a sharp eye out for this insect, the adults are very flighty and are often easily scattered when walking fields. I try not to let my shadow hit a plant before I get close enough to look at it so I can see the adults before they fly. Below I have two photos, one of the nymph and one of the adult insect. The nymphs of these insects are also quite small, about the size of an aphid. They are also a pale green color, but lack wings. They lack cornicles (tailpipes) that an aphid would have, and tend to be more mobile than an aphid. Fleahopper nymphs also lack the bands on the antennae a few other species of plant bugs have, and have a similar body shape to the adult bug.

Cotton Fleahopper Nymph
Kate Crumley

Cotton Fleahopper Adult
Kate Harrell

  Fleahopper feeding will cause squares to drop. Plants can recover for and compensate for some square loss, but the threshold for fleahoppers is 15-25 per 100 plants. I check for fleahoppers by inspecting the plant terminals once they start squaring. I look at 25 plants per stop in the field, usually checking 100 plants total in an 80-100 acre field, more if the field is larger.


  The chart above with action thresholds if from the cotton insect guide, and the one below containing insecticide suggestions is from cottonbugs.tamu.edu.



  Lygus bugs will feed on cotton squares, flowers, and small bolls. Feeding can cause damage to blooms (dirty blooms and damaged anthers, or puckered petals), deformed bolls, stunted growth, fruit shed, and small lesions on bolls.

Lygus Bug nymph
Kate Crumley

Lygus Bug adult
Kate Crumley

Chart from Cotton Insect Guide


  I have only seen one stink bug in cotton so far this year, but now that our cotton is putting bolls on we need to look for them. To scout for stink bugs pull 10 to 20 bolls about an inch in diameter from four places in the field. Check the inside of the bolls for warts, lesions, and stained lint. 
The economic threshold for stink bugs is 20% or more of the bolls with internal damage and stink bugs present. Some of the brown stink bug populations in our area have also been shown to have some resistance to pyrethroids. 


Green Stink Bug adult
Kate Crumley

Carpal Wall Warts from Stink Bug feeding damage
Kate Crumley

  I have not seen any bollworms, 
Helicoverpa zea, or eggs in fields yet this year, but I have started looking for them. These are caterpillars that feed on multiple crops and vegetables. In cotton they feed on squares and bolls, causing fruit loss. The last few years we had high numbers of this insect in our Bt cotton as well.

H. zea caterpillar in cotton square
Kate Crumley

  To scout for cotton bollworms I use the terminal and square inspection method. I make about four stops in a field, more if the field is larger than 100 acres. At each stop, I look at 25 plant terminals, checking the upper third of the plant for caterpillars and eggs. I also pull 25 half grown or larger green squares to bolls and look for bollworm damage. This week there were a few moths flying around in a couple of the fields in Matagorda county, and in one near Palacios we found two eggs laid. When documenting egg lay, if I find more than one on a leaf, I only count it as one. This caterpillar is highly cannibalistic, and generally only one caterpillar will result from eggs too near each other. The economic threshold for bollworms is 6% damaged bolls with live caterpillars present. In areas like ours on the upper gulf coast with documented Bt failures, the threshold for eggs on single and dual gene cotton is 20% (20 plants out of 100 with at least one egg). If you're finding bollworms in cotton or in corn, especially in viptera fields, please give me a call.

Cotton Insect Guide
 The current A&M recommendation is to use pyrethroids with caution. In areas needing residual control Prevathon at 18-20 fl oz or Besiege at 9-10 fl oz works well. If you don't need residual control you can get by with Prevathon at 14 fl oz or Besiege at 7-8 fl oz.

Cotton Insect Guide
  

  Stay safe and have a good weekend everyone, I look forward to seeing you all in person again soon.

Sincerely,

Kate Crumley


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