Latest Distribution Map for Western Bean Cutworm

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Just wrote an article and completed the map of the distribution of western bean cutworm in the Great Lakes Region.  Check it out in the latest CropPest Newsletter at:

http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/crops/field/news/croppest/2009/18cpo09a3.htm

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More Western Bean Cutworm Damage Sightings to Add to the List

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

More reports of WBC damage are coming in.  Here is an updated list of sites with damage and or larvae found in Ontario:

Chatham- Kent (Dover Centre, Bothwell)

Lambton (Petrolia)

Middlesex (Wardsville, Appin, Glencoe)

Elgin (Rodney)

Huron (Blyth, Clinton, Exeter, Dashwood, Holmesville, Belgrave)

Bruce (Walkerton, Kincardine)

Simcoe (Alliston, Barrie, Stayner)

Durham (Kinsale, Lindsay, Brooklin)

Victoria (Dunsford)

Peterborough (Millbrook)

Dundas (Chesterville)

I will be attending a meeting this week with my US counterparts where we will be discussing what each state/province has observed with regards to WBC and soybean aphids.  I will give an update next week on any new information from the meeting.

 

More Reports of WBC Damage – Scout and Let Me Know

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Sorry…It’s been a few weeks since my last blog but I finally went on holidays.  I’m back and want to give you an update. While away, more reports were coming in of western bean cutworm damage being found in Ontario.  Others are asking how to scout for the damage this fall so that they can determine if they have WBC.  So here is an update:

Counties (nearest town) reporting larvae and/or damage in 2009 include:

Chatham- Kent (Dover Centre)

Lambton (Petrolia)

Middlesex (Wardsville, Appin)

Elgin (Rodney)

Huron (Blyth, Clinton)

Simcoe (Alliston, Barrie)

Eastern Ontario – Dundas (Chesterville)

Anyone who finds damage/larvae in their field, please report it to me either via this blog or through email so that I can continue to keep track.

How to scout for WBC damage this fall:  WBC damage will not necessarily be in one specific area of the field.  Wander through the field looking for any signs of frass at the ear tips.  Look for any signs of external entry holes from the sides of the husk, though WBC do not always enter from the side of the ear.   Signs of bird damage can also indicate that there was something in the ear that the bird went after.  Though bird damage does not confirm that WBC was in the ear.  The birds could be going after picnic beetles, corn borer or corn rootworm adults too.  I have also had the odd hybrid that didn’t have a tightly closed husk at the ear tip and when there were signs of less silk or there was frass on the silk, I’d open that husk to investigate.  Otherwise, just peel back random husks throughout the field if no external signs of damage exist.  Once you have found an ear with damage and or larvae, investigate the plants around that one.  Check in that row and the plants in the rows directly adjacent to the initial plant with damage.  Odds are there will be more.  These larvae spread from their original egg masses and can crawl 12 feet down the row and 10 feet across.  So many neighbouring plants can be infested by just one eggmass. 

If a WBC larvae is not present in the ear that has damage, we can not fully confirm that the damage was caused by WBC as it could also have been from ECB or corn earworm..though WBC does tend to be the most destructive feeder.

Here is a scouting video through Purdue University that helps explain what I’ve talked about: http://extension.entm.purdue.edu/pestcrop/2009/issue21/index.html#westernWhat do you do if you find damage?  First, report the location of the damage to me.  Then keep an eye on the quality of this site before harvest.  If ear rot starts to set in because of the damage caused by WBC, plan to harvest this field as early as possible.  Additional precautions/actions that should be taken to reduce the impact of ear rot can be found in the Agronomy Guide, OMAFRA Publication 811 at: http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/crops/pub811/14corn.htm

 That is all the bad news I have for today :)

Pictures are also available in my previous blogs and on the WBC Trap Network website at:  http://www.cornpest.ca/default/index.cfm/wbc-trap-network/trapping-workshop/

More Western Bean Cutworm Damage Being Found

Monday, September 7th, 2009

 

We visited the Newbury WBC site last week and it was concerning to see so many plants infested with WBC larvae.  There were no external entry holes from the outside of the ear which could fool those who think the ears are clean.  Pay extra attention to those ears that are slightly opened at the ear tip (husk not tightly closed) and if the silks look thinned.  Once ears are peeled open, look for signs of frass (larvae excrement).  Neighbouring plants are also likely to have larvae too.

 More reports were coming in late last week from reps who were out checking their trials and finding WBC.  So far, WBC larvae have been found in corn in Dover Center (by Shawn Winter of Maizex) and near Strathroy (by Nick Stokman).  Also, Joe Tomecek reported finding WBC in dry beans near Kent Bridge.

Please keep checking fields and sending me your damage reports.   There is nothing we can do this year about this injury (and none so far have been at economic levels) but the more damage sitings we know of this year, the more knowledge we gain about the distribution and impact of this pest in Ontario.  It will also inform us of any potential overwintering sites and potential problem regions for next year.

First Western Bean Cutworm Larvae Found in Ontario

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

My summer students are going to be frustrated when they find this out, especially with all of the scouting they have done looking for WBC egg masses and larvae and finding nothing to show for it.  But today Adam Pfeffer of Monsanto brought in the first WBC larvae found here in Ontario.  The larvae was from a corn field in Rodney Ontario.  This tells us that there are probably other sites with some larvae  in them as well, so I do encourage you to be out scouting your fields too.  Larvae would most likely be in the ear of the corn.  But we are also still catching moths in our traps so some egg laying could still be taking place.

Purdue University put a WBC scouting video within their newsletter this week which helps explain how to look for larvae in the corn ear:  http://extension.entm.purdue.edu/pestcrop/2009/issue21/index.html

And Ron Hammond from Ohio State University put together a video from our trip to visit Chris DiFonzo from Michigan State University in one of her heavily infested corn field last year: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5EsPWySxEI

If you do find ear feeding, larvae or egg masses, please let me know!