EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control

Lygus became the number one pest of cotton in 1998 with statewide losses of over $16 million in spite of individual costs to the grower of over $55/A for control. Selective technologies for whitefly and pink bollworm control reduce the number of broad spectrum sprays that incidentally control Lygus....

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Main Authors: Ellsworth, Peter C., Deeter, Brian, Whitlow, Mike
Other Authors: Silvertooth, Jeff
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/197261
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1972612015-10-23T04:44:13Z EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control Ellsworth, Peter C. Deeter, Brian Whitlow, Mike Silvertooth, Jeff The University of Arizona, Department of Entomology & Maricopa Agricultural Center Rhône-Poulenc Company, Fresno, CA Arizona Cotton Research & Protection Council Agriculture -- Arizona Cotton -- Arizona Insect investigations Lygus became the number one pest of cotton in 1998 with statewide losses of over $16 million in spite of individual costs to the grower of over $55/A for control. Selective technologies for whitefly and pink bollworm control reduce the number of broad spectrum sprays that incidentally control Lygus. Control of Lygus depends mainly on just two related chemical classes of insecticides, organophosphates and carbamates. Over reliance on such a limited diversity of chemical controls increases the risk of resistance. Further, FQPA threatens the future availability of many of our main stay chemical controls. The study reported here sought to investigate the commercial suitability of a new compound, Regent®, for the control of Lygus. This novel mode of action represents one of the few potential new tools under development for Lygus management. Under a federal Emergency Use Permit (EUP), Regent was tested against two standards of Lygus control (Orthene® and Vydate®) and an untreated check. In a test of unusually high Lygus densities, Regent provided excellent control of small (instars 1–3) and large (instars 4–5) Lygus nymphs and may provide marginally better control of adults than current standards. None of the tested agents provided quick control or knockdown of adults. Rather, adult levels were reduced over time, most likely as a result of prevention of the development of new adults via nymphal control. All three materials protected cotton producing yields significantly higher than the check. The Orthene treatment had the highest yield, though not significantly higher than the Regent treatment which was effectively sprayed one less time than the other compounds. 1999 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/197261 Cotton: A College of Agriculture Report en_US AZ1123 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Cotton -- Arizona
Insect investigations
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Cotton -- Arizona
Insect investigations
Ellsworth, Peter C.
Deeter, Brian
Whitlow, Mike
EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
description Lygus became the number one pest of cotton in 1998 with statewide losses of over $16 million in spite of individual costs to the grower of over $55/A for control. Selective technologies for whitefly and pink bollworm control reduce the number of broad spectrum sprays that incidentally control Lygus. Control of Lygus depends mainly on just two related chemical classes of insecticides, organophosphates and carbamates. Over reliance on such a limited diversity of chemical controls increases the risk of resistance. Further, FQPA threatens the future availability of many of our main stay chemical controls. The study reported here sought to investigate the commercial suitability of a new compound, Regent®, for the control of Lygus. This novel mode of action represents one of the few potential new tools under development for Lygus management. Under a federal Emergency Use Permit (EUP), Regent was tested against two standards of Lygus control (Orthene® and Vydate®) and an untreated check. In a test of unusually high Lygus densities, Regent provided excellent control of small (instars 1–3) and large (instars 4–5) Lygus nymphs and may provide marginally better control of adults than current standards. None of the tested agents provided quick control or knockdown of adults. Rather, adult levels were reduced over time, most likely as a result of prevention of the development of new adults via nymphal control. All three materials protected cotton producing yields significantly higher than the check. The Orthene treatment had the highest yield, though not significantly higher than the Regent treatment which was effectively sprayed one less time than the other compounds.
author2 Silvertooth, Jeff
author_facet Silvertooth, Jeff
Ellsworth, Peter C.
Deeter, Brian
Whitlow, Mike
author Ellsworth, Peter C.
Deeter, Brian
Whitlow, Mike
author_sort Ellsworth, Peter C.
title EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
title_short EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
title_full EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
title_fullStr EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
title_full_unstemmed EUP Evaluation of a Novel Insecticide for Lygus Control
title_sort eup evaluation of a novel insecticide for lygus control
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 1999
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/197261
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