DlB—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 8,1980 Key to cutworm control may be in com plants NEWARK, Del. - The most visible spokesmen for Integrated Pest Management in Delaware are the county agents and pest management specialists of the Delaware Extension Service. But their pest management recom mendations are based on extensive research into non chemical as well as chemical controls by an equally important group, the entomology and insect ecology researchers of the Delaware Agricultural Experiment Station. John Reese’s current work with cutworms is a good case in point. The black cutworm is a major pest of com which also attacks over 70 other Grain marketing foresees hog-tied ST. LOUIS, Mo. A gram company official said Thursday that increased government involvement in agricultural business could trigger a “gndlock” - a regulatory traffic snarl threatening the existence of companies unable or un willing to cope. Clarence Palmby, vice president of Continental Gram Company, told a marketing seminar of the American Feed Manufac turers Association here that “over-regulation is a growing concern to every industry and every business established and financed to earn a satisfactory return on investment.” Attacking short-sighted government policymaking and resultant flawed legislation, Palmby cited the plan whereby com to be used for gasohol would be made available, under certain conditions, to such manufacturers at preferential prices. Calling this concept “disruptive to established marketing, transporting and handling mechanisms”, he asked: “Why not let the com FRANKLIN H. KREIDER 30% LIQUID NITROGEN Check Our Fall Fill-Up Price Call Us For Your Fall Fertilizer And Limestone Needs ' crop plants. Although this pest is sporadic in Delaware, there’s a good chance we’ll be seeing more of it in the future as more fanners turn to notillage, according to Delaware extension pest management specialist Mark Graustem. Recent doubts cast upon the safety of Toxaphene, one of the most frequently used chemicals in cutworm control, make non-chemical controls for this pest all the more desirable. Reese said he feels the key to non-chemical control for cutworms may be found in the corn plants themselves. “If every plant were totally susceptible to every insect,” Reese explains, “there would be no plants by now. All plants probably come from the market place?” In reviewing upcoming legislative proposals, Palmby was critical of the suggestion that production costs be included m farm programs to be considered. He said inclusion of the cost of production principle would assign the U.S. Department of Agriculture a “task that cannot be done with any degree of ac curacy.” Palmby argued that producers benefit most when allowed to use their own judgment in forward planning. “They always suffer,” he added, “sometimes after a delay of several years, if they are offered benefits tied to a historical past.” He noted the price of com in this country and the world has not kept pace with most other traded commodiites such as petroleum, silver and gold, inviting in tercession by the “quick fixers.” “I am aware of loud voices from quarters uninformed on either the history or the sensitivity of the corn 2400 Dairy Road Lancaster, Pa. 17601 717-898-0129 have built-in mechanisms to protect themselves against certain insects. We need much more information about these mechanisms. ” It’s a well established fact that black Cutworms can hurt corn plants, but Reese and his graduate student Merry Field have been demonstrating that certain com lines can be equally bad for the cutworms’ health. In the laboratory Reese has been allowing cutworm larvae to infest corn seedlings of different breeding lines. At the end or the experimental penod when he examines the cutworms, he finds that some have grown well and others have grown poorly. Reese is trying to identify official industry pricing structure,” he said. He sees as a plus the fact that the United States has both the ability to produce and the financial and technological wherewithal to carry inventory. “Many of our largest importing customer coun tries buy on a ‘hand-to mouth’ basis. This being the case, we should acknowledge and exploit the fact that domestic carryovers can be dollar earners,” he continued. “To adopt a policy any less ambitious WOUld certainly jeopardize our present price discovery system.” • Optically clear and strength restored j r • Fraction of the cost v X*--'' of replacement Can your WOVUS METHOOman™ 215-376-9772 location SHAPPELL/NOVUS Dtv of ShappeK, Inc 1141 Penn Ave (Rear) Wyomissing, PA 19610 the mechanisms in certain corn breeding lines that slow down the cutworms’ growth, thereby making the insect more susceptible to parasites and predators. He’s working with Ex periment Station researcher Jim Hawk to breed these mechanisms into new com varieties along with such other desirable charac teristics as drought resistance and high yield. Identifying tHF mechanisms is challenging because they can take several forms. One corn line may contain a chemical that is slightly toxic to cutworms, while another may have such a high fiber content that the worms would eat the plants without obtaining enough nutrition to survive. At present the only way to lode for these mechanisms is through trial and error or process of elimination exposing each individual com line to the cutworms and waiting to see what happens. But Reese is working to develop a more efficient, standardized technique for pinpointing the mechanisms that interfere with cutworm growth. Eventually he hopes to be able to tell if a plant contains such a mechanism by analyzing a sample of the plant tissue itself. This way he would be able to evaluate greater numbers of plants, thus approaching the goal of deliberately and foresightedly designing insect resistant plants. Selective breeding for cutworm resistance might then proceed much faster. Graustein feels Reese’s work shows great promise for Integrated Pesl Management The specialist says he’s enthusiastic about any approach to pest management that relies or nature’s own mechanisms, thereby helping growers cut back on the need for chemicals.