A34-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 21,2001 CONDUCTING AN ON-FARM TEST John Rowehl, CCA Cumberland County Agent Many farmers like to conduct tests of hybrids, varieties, crop protection chemicals, or other crop inputs on their own fields. Done correctly, this is a good thing to do. If not done the right way, results may be misleading. The most important thing to keep in mind is that you want to remove as many confounding factors as possible from any test you do on your farm. A common mistake is making a comparison between one year and another or between one field and another with different soils, soil fertility, different crop history, etc. Doing a side-by-side compari son is the best approach to take. This removes influences of time, planting and harvesting condi tions, cropping history, and weather changes. Try to use a field with soils as uniform as possible. But varia tions in soil type and soil fertility exist in even the best fields and must be taken into consideration. Anyone who has seen a yield map or had grid soil sampling has seen this. There are two different ap proaches to dealing with this. One popular way, particularly in hybrid testing, is to use a multi- Ifkmt Institute tog "We're Here To Serve" FARMERS Tired of Paying High Insurance Rates On Trucks You Seldom Use? We Offer Competitive Prices On Trucks from Pickups to Tractor Trailers. We Offer All Types Of Farm and Agribusiness Insurance. Please Call For Quotations or Information. Roger Slusher • Bob Lee • Carol Young • Cindy Beyer • Julie Miskelley • Terry Wingert 2488 Maple Ave., Quarryville, PA 17566 (717) 786-1711 (800) 882-1415 pie check system in which a “tester” hybrid is planted every third or fourth strip. This check is used to adjust the yields of the other hybrids to compensate for changes in the field. The other way and preferred method of crop scientists is to replicate the treatments several times in the field. By not doing one of these things, there is a good chance that the results you see are due to the differences in the field rather than differences in the products themselves. Look at the following example of two hybrids that were tested last year in an on farm test. The yields shown are from each repli cation. Look at any single repli cation and ask yourself what conclusion you would come to if only one side-by-side test had been done. Then look at another replication and ask yourself the same question. Bu/Ac Hybrid Rep 1 Rep 2 Rep 3 A 173 208 186 B 181 186 203 (The average of these two hybrids can be found at the end of this article). In some areas, several fanners Hybrid A = 189 bushels per work together to do the same acre. comparisons on several farms in Hydrid B = 190 bushels per the area. The advantage of this is acre. Ohio State Pathologist Plant Pathogen Test Improves WOOSTER, Ohio A test commonly used to detect the presence of a plant pathogen in the aster leafhopper has been im- that it reduces the number of replications needed on any one farm. Make the width of each treat ment as narrow as possible so that the variation in soil change is as small as possible. Likewise, keep the number of things you are trying to compare to a min imum for the same reason. Try to use a field that’s at least several hundred feet long to help dilute the effects of extra good or poor spots in the field or from the ef fect of a planter or spreader not operating normally at the end or beginning of a field as it starts up. An informational circular about conducting on farm tests is available from cooperative exten sion. If you are interested in doing a test of your own, you can always contact one of the agron omy agents to bounce some ideas off of us. 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The aster leafhopper, an insect that feeds on such crops as let tuce, carrots and celery, is a vec tor for aster yellows phytoplas ma, a pathogen that can cause severe economic losses of the crops, especially lettuce. Dis eased plants turn yellow, are malformed and may bolt prema turely, making them unmarket able. Aster yellows phytoplasma, a cell wall-less bacterium that causes the aster yellows disease, cannot be cultured in the lab and is difficult to detect in the field. Ohio State University plant pathologist Sally Miller said spe cifically identifying the reproduc tive status of the pathogen within the leafhopper may help predict seasonal epidemics leading to ef fective preventive methods of control. Miller works at the uni versity’s Ohio Agricultural Re search and Development Center in Wooster. The most common method for detecting aster yellows phyto plasma involves a polymerase chain reaction assay (PCR) that amplifies specific fragments of phytoplasma DNA in the leaf hopper. The test, though quick and highly effective, only detects the presence of the pathogen and does not differentiate between in sects that are infected and those that are inoculative, or able to transmit the pathogen from plant to plant. Miller and OARDC graduate student J.H. Zhang developed a sucrose-feed- We’re Your Firestone Farm Tire Dealer! Count on us year-round for: • A complete line of Firestone farm tires • In the field emergency repair service • Implement and light truck tires in stock too! Many Other Tires In Stock - Call For Prices FARM TIRES Firestone All Traction 23° 18.4R34 1 ★ $565.00 20.8R38 1 ★ $750.00 20.8R38 2 ★ $855.00 20.8R42 2 ★ $905.00 ing solution method preceding the PCR assay that screens for those differences. “The PCR assay is good for detecting the pathogen. But the feeding solution method goes one step further in determining whether or not a leafhopper can transmit it to plants,” said Mill er. “From those results we can predict aster yellows epidemics and recommend to farmers cer tain preventive or control mea sures.” The idea behind the technique involves feeding infected leaf hoppers a sucrose solution through a parafilm membrane. While feeding, leafhoppers with a high phytoplasma content will spit the pathogen into the solu tion. Leafhoppers that do not carry the phytoplasma, or those in which the phytoplasma’s dor mant period is not complete, do not return the pathogen to the feeding solution. The solution is then tested by PCR. “From the test, we can esti mate how many insects are inoc ulative and how many are only infected, and not yet inocula tive,” said Miller. The study con ducted to determine the accuracy of the sucrose solution showed that the method could positively detect inoculative insects over 99 percent of the time. 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