Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis

A severe infestation of the gall midge Epicalamus phalaridis (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)occurred in a field of reed canary grass, Phalaris arundinacea in northern Sweden. The midge species has potential to become a serious pest on Phalaris grown for bioenergy or fibre production. Larvae of the midge fe...

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Main Authors: S. HELLQVIST, M. FINELL, S. LANDSTRÖM
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland 2008-12-01
Series:Agricultural and Food Science
Online Access:https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5741
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spelling doaj-f398e3d23b6249fc879175fe111cdca32020-11-24T21:14:35ZengScientific Agricultural Society of FinlandAgricultural and Food Science1459-60671795-18952008-12-01121 Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridisS. HELLQVISTM. FINELLS. LANDSTRÖMA severe infestation of the gall midge Epicalamus phalaridis (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)occurred in a field of reed canary grass, Phalaris arundinacea in northern Sweden. The midge species has potential to become a serious pest on Phalaris grown for bioenergy or fibre production. Larvae of the midge feed beneath leaf sheaths and the crop lodges in late summer. Details are given on the biology of the midge. In the infested field, population densities of the midge were very high during three consecutive years. The crop was weakened and the occurrence of weeds increased. The dry matter yields declined markedly and were after three years of midge-attack about 50% of the average yield in the preceding years. The yield dropped comparatively more when the crop was harvested in the spring as opposed to harvest in late autumn and more at a nitrogen fertilisation at 100 kg compared to 200 kg N ha1 per year. The effect of midge attack on fibre quality was studied. The fibre properties of midge-infested parts of internodes were poor, but as midge-damaged parts are brittle, they could probably be sorted out in a fractionation process. Undamaged parts of infested internodes had the same fibre properties as those from an uninfested crop.;https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5741
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. HELLQVIST
M. FINELL
S. LANDSTRÖM
spellingShingle S. HELLQVIST
M. FINELL
S. LANDSTRÖM
Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
Agricultural and Food Science
author_facet S. HELLQVIST
M. FINELL
S. LANDSTRÖM
author_sort S. HELLQVIST
title Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
title_short Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
title_full Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
title_fullStr Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
title_full_unstemmed Reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of Epicalamus phalaridis
title_sort reed canary grass observations of effects on crop stand and fibre quality caused by infestation of epicalamus phalaridis
publisher Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland
series Agricultural and Food Science
issn 1459-6067
1795-1895
publishDate 2008-12-01
description A severe infestation of the gall midge Epicalamus phalaridis (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)occurred in a field of reed canary grass, Phalaris arundinacea in northern Sweden. The midge species has potential to become a serious pest on Phalaris grown for bioenergy or fibre production. Larvae of the midge feed beneath leaf sheaths and the crop lodges in late summer. Details are given on the biology of the midge. In the infested field, population densities of the midge were very high during three consecutive years. The crop was weakened and the occurrence of weeds increased. The dry matter yields declined markedly and were after three years of midge-attack about 50% of the average yield in the preceding years. The yield dropped comparatively more when the crop was harvested in the spring as opposed to harvest in late autumn and more at a nitrogen fertilisation at 100 kg compared to 200 kg N ha1 per year. The effect of midge attack on fibre quality was studied. The fibre properties of midge-infested parts of internodes were poor, but as midge-damaged parts are brittle, they could probably be sorted out in a fractionation process. Undamaged parts of infested internodes had the same fibre properties as those from an uninfested crop.;
url https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5741
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AT mfinell reedcanarygrassobservationsofeffectsoncropstandandfibrequalitycausedbyinfestationofepicalamusphalaridis
AT slandstrom reedcanarygrassobservationsofeffectsoncropstandandfibrequalitycausedbyinfestationofepicalamusphalaridis
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