Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton

Stink bugs are beginning to emerge as important pests of cotton that often require management in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast. As eradication of the boll weevil progresses and producers increasingly adopt transgenic cotton varieties resulting in reduced broad spectrum pesticide use, stink bugs will li...

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Main Author: Hopkins, Bradley Wayne
Other Authors: Bernal, Julio S.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3307
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-33072013-01-08T10:38:10ZSpecies composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cottonHopkins, Bradley WaynePentatomidaequadratorservusStink bugs are beginning to emerge as important pests of cotton that often require management in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast. As eradication of the boll weevil progresses and producers increasingly adopt transgenic cotton varieties resulting in reduced broad spectrum pesticide use, stink bugs will likely become key cotton pests in this area. The Lower Texas Gulf Coast has a stink bug complex that differs somewhat from other areas of the Cotton Belt. Euschistus servus and lesser brown stink bugs, including E. quadrator, E. obscurus, E. crassus, and E. ictericus, make up the largest portion of this pest complex, and green/southern green stink bugs play less important roles than in other areas. Using evidence of internal feeding as a sampling criterion detected stink bug infestations more frequently that when using visual or drop cloth sampling methods. The main drawback to using this method is that species composition may still need to be determined when an economic threshold is reached in order to select the most effective control. Euschistus servus and E. quadrator both caused significant reductions in yield and fiber quality in cotton bolls, but E. servus was able to reduce yield and quality in small (1.8 cm), medium (2.8 cm), and large (3.2 cm) bolls, whereas E. quadrator reduced yield in only small bolls and reduced quality in only small and medium bolls. In general, E. servus caused more damage to bolls than E. quadrator and was able to damage a wider range of boll sizes. Dicrotophos was the most effective insecticide for stink bug control. Exposure to pyrethroids caused high mortality in N. viridula similar to that of dicrotophos, but pyrethroid activity was more variable when E. servus were exposed. In general, E. quadrator was more susceptible to insecticide treatments than E. servus, but both had similar mortalities when exposed to organophosphates, pyrethroids, and carbamates. Dynamic evidence of internal feeding thresholds may potentially be the best method for determining the need for stink bug control in cotton, but further research is necessary to refine these thresholds and make them applicable to the Lower Texas Gulf Coast.Texas A&M UniversityBernal, Julio S.Knutson, Allen E.2006-04-12T16:06:18Z2006-04-12T16:06:18Z2005-122006-04-12T16:06:18ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext576999 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3307en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Pentatomidae
quadrator
servus
spellingShingle Pentatomidae
quadrator
servus
Hopkins, Bradley Wayne
Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
description Stink bugs are beginning to emerge as important pests of cotton that often require management in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast. As eradication of the boll weevil progresses and producers increasingly adopt transgenic cotton varieties resulting in reduced broad spectrum pesticide use, stink bugs will likely become key cotton pests in this area. The Lower Texas Gulf Coast has a stink bug complex that differs somewhat from other areas of the Cotton Belt. Euschistus servus and lesser brown stink bugs, including E. quadrator, E. obscurus, E. crassus, and E. ictericus, make up the largest portion of this pest complex, and green/southern green stink bugs play less important roles than in other areas. Using evidence of internal feeding as a sampling criterion detected stink bug infestations more frequently that when using visual or drop cloth sampling methods. The main drawback to using this method is that species composition may still need to be determined when an economic threshold is reached in order to select the most effective control. Euschistus servus and E. quadrator both caused significant reductions in yield and fiber quality in cotton bolls, but E. servus was able to reduce yield and quality in small (1.8 cm), medium (2.8 cm), and large (3.2 cm) bolls, whereas E. quadrator reduced yield in only small bolls and reduced quality in only small and medium bolls. In general, E. servus caused more damage to bolls than E. quadrator and was able to damage a wider range of boll sizes. Dicrotophos was the most effective insecticide for stink bug control. Exposure to pyrethroids caused high mortality in N. viridula similar to that of dicrotophos, but pyrethroid activity was more variable when E. servus were exposed. In general, E. quadrator was more susceptible to insecticide treatments than E. servus, but both had similar mortalities when exposed to organophosphates, pyrethroids, and carbamates. Dynamic evidence of internal feeding thresholds may potentially be the best method for determining the need for stink bug control in cotton, but further research is necessary to refine these thresholds and make them applicable to the Lower Texas Gulf Coast.
author2 Bernal, Julio S.
author_facet Bernal, Julio S.
Hopkins, Bradley Wayne
author Hopkins, Bradley Wayne
author_sort Hopkins, Bradley Wayne
title Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
title_short Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
title_full Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
title_fullStr Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
title_full_unstemmed Species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the Lower Texas Gulf Coast and the virulence of Euschistus species to cotton
title_sort species composition and seasonal abundance of stink bugs in cotton in the lower texas gulf coast and the virulence of euschistus species to cotton
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3307
work_keys_str_mv AT hopkinsbradleywayne speciescompositionandseasonalabundanceofstinkbugsincottoninthelowertexasgulfcoastandthevirulenceofeuschistusspeciestocotton
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