scholarly journals Evaluation of Exp 61096A for Control of Rice Stink Bug in a Cage Study, 1997

1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 260-260
Author(s):  
J.L. Bernhardt

Abstract A field study was conducted to compare RSB control using EXP 61096A and a standard, methyl parathion. The experimental design was a RCB with 3 replications. Plot size was 9 rows (7-inch spacing) by 15 ft. Rice was drill seeded in Crowley silt loam at 90 lb/acre on 6 May and emerged on 17 May. Nitrogen was applied in a 3-way split of 75 lb N/acre as urea on 16 Jun and 30 lb N/acre on 10 and 23 Jul. Permanent flood was established on 22 Jun. Rice was 50% headed (panicle emergence) on 6 Aug. Insecticides were applied on 25 Aug with a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer at 18 gpa. Three days to applications, adult RSB were hand collected from rice fields and placed in 5-gal plastic buckets with bouquets of heading rice and weed host plants in water. Host plants were changed at 3 d intervals. Shortly before applications, 3 RSB were placed in nylon tulle sleeve cages, 4 inches diam by 14 inches long. Cage tops were closed with twist ties. RSB were herded to one end where a string was tied around the cage, effectively keeping the RSB confined to one end. Within 15 min after each insecticide application, 3 sleeve cages were pulled over 2 rice panicles and flag leaves and held in place with twist ties around the plants. Sleeve cages with RSB were also placed in plots 24, 72, and 120 h after insecticide application. After 72 h of exposure, plants were cut below the cage and taken to the laboratory where RSB mortality was determined. Data were analyzed with ANOVA and means separated by LSD.

1997 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 288-288
Author(s):  
J. L. Bernhardt

Abstract The experimental design was a RCB with 4 replications. Plot size was 9 rows (7 inch spacing) by 20 ft. Each plot was bound by levees. Rice was drill-seeded in Crowley silt loam at 90 lb/acre on 3 May and emerged on 12 May. Propanil and Bolero at 4 and 2 lb (AI)/acre, respectively, were applied for weed control on 29 May. Nitrogen was applied in a 3-way split of 75 lb N/acre as urea on 12 Jun and 30 lb N/acre on 5 and 14 Jul. Permanent flood was established on 12 Jun. All treatments of Dimilin were made with a CO2-pressurized back-pack sprayer at 18 gpa. Furadan 3G was applied 10 d after permanent flood with a hand-shaker. On 3 and 5 Jul and on 9 and 10 Jul five 4X4 inch (diam by depth) soil cores with an average of 5 plants/core were removed from plots. Soil was washed from the plant roots into a 40-mesh screen. The screen was immersed in salt water and RWW immatures were removed. Plots were harvested with a small combine on 13 Sept. Reported yields were adjusted to 12% moisture. Data were analyzed with ANOVA and LSD.


1995 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-225
Author(s):  
J. L. Bernhardt

Abstract Three rates of fipronil (EXP60655A 1.5G) applied preplant and lightly incorporated were compared with carbofuran (Furadan 3G) and an untreated check for control of RWW. Experimental design was a RCB with 4 replications. Plot size was 9 rows (7 inch row spacing) × 16 ft. Rice was drill-seeded in a Crowley silt loam at 110 lb/acre 12 May and emerged 20 May. Fipronil was applied broadcast with a hand shaker and lightly incorporated with a hand rake on 12 May. Propanil and thiobencarb at 2 lb (AI)/acre each and bentazon at 1 lb (AI)/acre were applied 1 Jun. Permanent flood was applied on 13 Jun. Nitrogen was applied in a 3-way split of 120 lb/acre on 13 Jun and 30 lb/acre each on 15 and 26 Jul. Furadan 3G was applied broadcast with a hand shaker on 20 Jun. On 5 and 12 Jul five 4 × 4 inch (diam by depth) soil cores were removed from each plot. Soil was washed from plant roots into 40-mesh screens. Screens were immersed in salt water and RWW immatures were recovered and counted. The center 4 rows × 12 feet of plots were harvested on 27 Sep with a small plot combine. Reported yields were adjusted to 12% moisture.


1982 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 867-875 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walker A. Jones ◽  
M. J. Sullivan

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michely Ferreira Santos de Aquino ◽  
Edison Ryoti Sujii ◽  
Miguel Borges ◽  
Maria Carolina Blassioli Moraes ◽  
Raul Alberto Laumann

1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 260-261
Author(s):  
J.L. Bernhardt

Abstract The experimental design was a RCB with 6 treatments and 4 replications. Plot size was 9 rows (7-inch spacing) by 20 ft. Each plot was bound by levees. Foundation seed rice was treated with fipronil 75 FS by Celpril Industries (Manteca, CA). Treated and untreated rice was drill seeded by Crowley silt loam at 90 lb/acre on 13 May and emerged between 24 and 28 May. Cool, rainy weather extended the emergence period and contributed to 5 to 15% stand reduction in plots. Propanil (Stam M4) and thiobencarb (Bolero 8 E) at 3 and 2 lb (AI)/acre, respectively, were applied for weed control on 12 Jun. Nitrogen was applied in a 3-way split of 90 lb N/acre as urea on 2 Jul and 30 lb N/acre on 23 and 31 Jul. Permanent flood was established on 27 Jun. Post-flood foliar treatments of Fury, Karate, and Dimilin were made with a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer at 18 gpa. On 18 and 23 Jul three 4X4 inch (diam by depth) soil cores with an average of 3 plants/core were removed from plots. Soil was washed from the plant roots into a 40-mesh screen. The screen was immersed in salt water and RWW immatures were removed. Plots were harvested with a Yanmar combine on 7 Oct. Reported yields were adjusted to 12% moisture. Data were analyzed with an ANOVA and means separated with LSD.


1997 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Galen P. Dively ◽  
James J. Linduska ◽  
Marylee Ross ◽  
Donna Baumann ◽  
Carol Cain ◽  
...  

Abstract The experimental design was a RCB design with four replications and 8 treatments. Drenching doses were 0 (two controls per block), 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0 and 8.0 ounces of Admire 2F per acre equivalence of bedding trays. The diluted drench was applied to individual cells of bedding trays using a pipetted volume of one ml per plant. In addition, a drench treatment of 16 fluid oz of Admire was applied in the transplant water. Plot size for each treatment combination was one row 20 feet long (20 tomato plants) with rows spaced 64 inches apart. Plots were planted 14 May. After transplanting, weekly counts were made of egg clusters, early larvae (first/second instars), late larvae (third/fourth instars), live adults, and dead adults on the ground. Percent defoliation was recorded per plant at two times. Plots were harvested and graded on 8 Aug.


Author(s):  
A J Cato ◽  
G M Lorenz ◽  
N R Bateman ◽  
J T Hardke ◽  
J L Black ◽  
...  

Abstract The stages of rice, Oryza sativa L. (Poales: Poaceae), grain maturity that are most susceptible to rice stink bug, Oebalus pugnax (F.), damage have been identified; however, the stage at which they are no longer capable of causing appreciable damage during grain maturity is unclear. The objective of this study was to determine the susceptibility of rice to rice stink bug feeding at different levels of grain maturity and determine an insecticide termination timing. Rice stink bug damage was examined using five levels of grain maturity described as percent of kernels reaching mature straw coloration referred to as hard dough (20, 40, 60, 80, and 100%) across a range of infestation levels using single panicle sleeve cages and large cages. Hybrid and conventional cultivar rice panicles at 20, 40, and 60% hard dough were found to be susceptible to indirect yield loss, as two rice stink bugs per panicle resulted in over 7% peck. In large cage trials, 25 rice stink bugs caused 0.7–1% peck to hybrid and conventional rice plots at 20% hard dough. Much less damage was observed once rice reached 60% hard dough, where peck averages only reached 0.4%. Decreased damage at 60% hard dough was validated using uncaged trials where 0.4% additional peck was observed in unsprayed plots. These data indicate that rice in the early stages of hard dough is susceptible to large levels of indirect yield loss, but unless significant densities of rice stink bug are present at 60% hard dough, no more sampling or applications are necessary.


1999 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 403-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Clemens ◽  
M. P. Schillinger ◽  
H. Goldbach ◽  
B. Huwe

1961 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 191-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. V. Joyce

The Cicadellid, Empoasca lybica de Berg, is an important pest of cotton in the Sudan Gezira, where over 300,000 acres of cotton are grown annually under irrigation. Cotton is sown in mid-August, and the plants are uprooted and burnt the following May. The life-cycle of E. lybica from egg to gravid adult takes 16–24 days, and the adults live for up to 40 days. There is no diapause. During the 100 days from late August to early December when breeding on cotton is of economic importance, a single male and female could give rise to some 50,000 progeny.During May to July, when crops are confined to irrigated gardens and river banks, E. lybica is widely distributed in such places and can be found also on tree hosts, which are numerous especially in the southern Gezira and along river banks. There is circumstantial evidence of displacement over long distances, and the great majority of catches of E. lybica in sticky traps were made before the increase in population on cotton that occurs from September onwards.Of the 53 species of host-plants that have been recorded, only Solanum dubium, Rhynchosia memnonia, Hibiscus spp. and Abutilon spp. are of importance in the ecology of E. lybica. The first two especially are common weeds in fallows, which comprise more than half the land under rotation. Populations of E. lybica in Gezira fallows at the time of cotton germination tended to be greatest where pre-sowing rains (i.e., those falling from 1st July to 15th August) were highest. Correspondingly, initial infestation of cotton was highest in seasons and places receiving the most pre-sowing rains, although density of infestation in any place was affected by sowing date and proximity to irrigated fields and gardens which supported weed host-plants.In order to develop a system of sampling for infestations of E. lybica in the cotton crop, the distribution of nymphs on cotton plants was examined. It was found that nymphs were most numerous in the leafiest zones of the plant and a random choice of leaves seemed an appropriate means of sampling for infestation. The distribution of nymphs within and between cotton fields was also investigated and a standard sampling procedure adopted.Peak infestations on cotton could not be predicted from the level of initial colonisation, or from surveys a month later. Peak infestations were usually inversely related to the level of initial colonisation, especially when comparisons were made between seasons, as at the Gezira Research Farm. That is to say, high levels of initial infestation, which occurred in seasons of good pre-sowing rains, tended to be followed by low rates of increase, and in years of poor pre-sowing rains, initial infestations tended to be low and rates of increase high.The relationship of these findings to those of Cowland & Hanna (1950) and Hanna (1950) are discussed; the hypothesis that pre-sowing mud-splash is a major factor controlling numbers of E. lybica in the Sudan Gezira is discounted, although it is accepted that this factor temporarily reduces populations.The rate of increase of infestations of E. lybica was found to be positively correlated with the concentration of nitrogen recorded 2–4 weeks previously in the cotton leaf. This concentration affected not only the rate of increase of the initial colonisers, but also the rate of recovery of populations during November and December after spray-applications of DDT. The nitrogen concentration in the leaf was increased by nitrogenous fertiliser, with a corresponding increase in infestations of E. lybica. It was also found to be negatively correlated with pre-sowing rains, which, if low, prevent the nitrate in the top 12 in. of Gezira soil being washed to lower levels, but the data presented provide no evidence that the relationship is causal.It is concluded that localities and seasons of poor pre-sowing rains favour a high rate of increase of small populations of E. lybica because of high nitrogen concentration in cotton leaves during September and October. This tendency is augmented by application of nitrogenous fertiliser. A regression equation relating the peak infestations of E. lybica with pre-sowing rainfall and with nitrogenous fertiliser is given and the infestations computed from this are shown not to differ significantly from those recorded in the Gezira as a whole, and in the four main divisions of it separately, during the eight years 1949–1956.


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