Office of
Agricultural Communications
By
Rebekah Ray MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Wild radish, winter peas, wild mustard, vetch and
curly dock may sound like ingredients of a savory green
salad, but these wild host plants harbor bugs that are
unsavory for Mississippi crops. Don
Sudbrink is a postdoctoral researcher working with MAFES
entomologist Aubrey Harris at the Delta Research and
Extension Center in Stoneville. "Remote-sensing
technologies can provide quicker responses than customary
manual scouting methods for determining the presence of
cotton pests like plant bugs, mites and worms," Sudbrink
said. "We're using remote-sensing technologies to detect
wild host plant areas early in the season and also to detect
pest infestations within cotton fields and crop maturity
levels related to these pest infestations during the
cropping season." MAFES
and USDA researchers are conducting a three-part evaluation
using remote sensing for cotton insect pests in the
Mississippi Delta, where tarnished plant bugs and other
pests destroy more than 16,600 bales of cotton per
year. Early
detection of pest infestations could reduce overall
applications of pesticides using variable rate application
technology, thus saving producers money. During noncropping
periods, tarnish plant bugs feed and reproduce on broadleaf
wild host plants. Remote-sensing technologies could help an
area-wide program find and control them in early spring,
reducing tarnish plant bugs populations before the cropping
season begins. Researchers
sampled several sites for tarnish plant bugs on wild host
plants and nonhost grasses at Stoneville and Tribbett. They
collected developing tarnish plant bug populations from
broadleaf wild host plants. Although tarnish plant bugs were
not previously known to develop on grasses, this study
revealed limited survival on ryegrass when the favored
broadleaf host plants were destroyed. Remote
sensing and spectro-radiometry showed distinct differences
between broadleaf hosts and nonhost grasses. This
information will be useful in development of prescription
maps for vegetation management practices. Preliminary
remote sensing revealed spider mite infestations in reddish
"hot spot" patterns in cotton fields and discerned them from
healthy and drought-stressed cotton in 1999. Nematode
infested areas in the field could also be seen in the images
based on very preliminary sample data. This information may
be useful in the targeting of precision pesticide
applications. Researchers
took remote-sensing data from cotton fields at Stoneville
and Tribbett during the summer of 2000. The data revealed
distinct areas of more vigorous crop growth in cotton fields
that correlated with tarnish plant bug infestations. Lower
plant bug infestations were found in the less vigorous
plants that were shorter with smaller canopy
coverage. Researchers
used this information to develop prescription spray maps of
the fields that reduced pesticide applications by 30 to 50
percent. Other important pests also are being investigated
in similar ongoing experiments. Released:
Apr. 2, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural
News:
Remote sensing
uncovers insects
Identifying
and controlling these plants can prevent early-season salad
days for pests and save cotton producers money later in the
season. Researchers with the Mississippi Agricultural and
Forestry Experiment Stations and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture are exploring the use of remote-sensing
techniques to detect insects in broadleaf wild host plants
and crops like cotton and soybeans. Cotton generated more
than $483 million for the state's economy last year, and
soybeans contributed more than $174 million.
For more information, contact: Dr. Aubrey Harris, (662)
686-9311
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010402rr.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.