—Lancaster Fannins, Saturday, February 17,1979 134 Effective rootworm control safeguards BLOOMINGTON, HI. - “In terms of economic damage over a wide geographic area, corn rootworm is probably the number one insect problem in com,” according to Dr. Mike Turner, manager of entomology and pathology research for Funk Seeds International. Studies have repeatedly shown that one rootworm per com plant can cost a grower eight-tenths of a bushel in yield loss per acre. Dr. Turner says root worms are a perennial pest throughout the Com Belt, There are three species: the western, norther •> and sourthem. Althougn one species usually predominates in a field, Dr. Turner notes that two and sometimes all three species may be present, depending on the geographic location. The adult beetles of the western rootworm are yellowish with a dark stripe on each wing cover. Nor thern rootworm adults are pale yellow as they emerge from the ground in mid summer, later turning a uniform green. Adults of the southern species are yellowish green with 12 black dots. The western rootworm interbreeds with the other two species, and the larvae and adults of the mating closely resemble the western rootworm parent. The western rootworm has been expanding its range in recent years, moving in a northeasterly direction across the Com Belt. Rootworms can reduce com yields in several ways. Dr. Turner says. Larvae of the northern and western species eat on the surface of the soil. They gouge out holes and tunnel lengthwise into the roots. Southern rootworm larvae also feed on the roots, but do not tunnel lengthwise. They feed on the growing points of young com plants while they are near the soil line, and may cause seedlings to wilt and die. Such root pruning weakens the plant’s root system and reduces yields, Dr. Turner explains, adding that lodging may also result. In addition to reducing anchorage and the plant’s ability to take the nutrients and water required for good yields from the soil, the Funk scientist says the You get more milk production when you use more quality ingredients. Dairymen all around the country and right around very ingredients that many other supplements lack! here . have discovered a big difference in their milk And what’s more, when you stop to consider the con production when they switched to MOL-MIX" vemence of using a high-quality supplement supplements, and there s one reason why A , n liquid form, there’s only one conclusion PERFORMANCE-PROVEN INGREDIENTS i you can reach YOU GET MORE MILK like corn distillers solubles, condensed j|§B|kpRODUCTION WHEN YOU USE MORE fermented corn extractives, phosphoric /*jiiai jtv AND YOU acid, and ammonium polyphosphate . AND YOU all quality ingredients that can increase S GET MORE QUALITY INGREDIENTS IN your milk production and yet the MOL-MIX! Mol'Mbi liquid supplements ingredients. Wegot'emlickedr JOHN Z. MARTIN New Holland RDI Phone 717-354-5848 adults of all three rootworm species feed on com silks. When this occurs befoi e pollination, this too can reduce yields. Dr. Turner says. The western rootworm is especially damaging in this respect. Several factors determine the capacity of com to tolerate rootworm damage. Dr. Turner says these in clude the strength of the root system, the number of roots the plant produces and its ability to regenerate roots, the stage of growth when attacked and how favorable growing conditions are after the rootworm larvae have attacked. According to Dr. Turner, Funk Seeds evaluates its mbred lines, present hybrids and those under develop ment for their ability to tolerate rootworm damage at all Funk research stations where com rootworms are a problem. “We continue to test hybrids that have already attained the G-Hyhnd rating to evaluate how tolerant they are to rootworm damage,” he says. “We’re taking materials that are new to develop tolerance as we develop the hybrids. We’ll throw things out very early m the program that are not tolerant, and this will allow us to carry greater tolerance NORTHAMPTON FARM BUREAU Tatamy, Pa. 18085 Phone 215-258-2871 right along with our high yielding capacity. “When we talk about tolerance, we’re talking about two thines One is the number of roots that a plant produces and the second is that plant’s ability to regenerate roots if some of its roots are destroyed by the com rootworm. The better adapted a plant is at regenerating roots or the more roots it may have to begin with, the less damage is apt to occur from root worm larvae damage. ” Dr. Turner says a root pulling technique developed by Funk is being used to evaluate each hybrid’s tolerance to rootworm damage under heavy in festion. The physical resistance to being uprotted by the special mechanical device that is employed is a function of the number and size of healthy roots each plant has near the end of the growing season, he explains. Visual observations are also made, such as whether or not the feeding of the root worm larvae has caused lodging'. Ray Sullivan, a Funk agronomist, says some growers think there’s little danger of rootworm damage in first-year com following soybeans because the beans are not a good host crop for a build-up of rootworm populations. While this is true, he points out that a soybean field can be a good place for root worms to multiply to economically damaging levels if it is weedy. “If there’s a weedy soybean field, whether it’s grasses, broadleaf weeds or volunteer com, the weeds will furnish the rootworm beetles with a food supply while they are mobile and ucpositmg eggs for the next generation, from mid Summer on,” he says. “When flowering, these weeds serve as hosts for the beetles, which feed on the pollen. “In a clean soybean field, the problem is less likely to occur, but rootworm beetles will migrate to a soybean field, particularly if it is close to a com field or if it is dry and the soybeans are lusher than the surrounding vegetation ” Sullivan encourages growers to apply a soil in secticide when planting com is-a field that had hpqn jp soybeans the previous year especially if the field was weedy or had volunteer com, Several soil insecticides, including Amaze, Counter, Dyfonate, Furadan, Lor sban, Mocap and Thrmet, RED ROSE FEED & FARM SUPPLY MAIN OFFICE; 27 N. Church St., Quarryville Phone 786-7361 Div. of Carnation Buck, PA Phone 284-4464 f - _ give good rootworm control, the agronomist says. He continues: “I’ve seen situations where there’s been a 25- to 30-bushel yield loss in first-year com from com rootworm because the grower didn’t treat for the insect.” While some attempts have been made recently to control rootworms by aerially spraying fields with a Sevin oil formulation while the adult beetles are mobile, Sullivan says this would work only if large areas of com were sprayed as needed throughout the egg-laying period, which lasts until frost. Field scouting by a yields past management con sultant is a must in such an approach to rootworm control, he adds. For further information, contact Sam Brungardt, Bader Rutter and Associates, Inc., 733 N. Van Buren, Milwaukee, Wis. 53202, (414) 276-7303 or Kenneth Rinkenberger, Public Relations Manager,’ Funk Seeds International, P. O. Box 2911, Bloomington, Illinois 61701, (309) 829-9461. /j