Ithaca, New York
July 24, 2001
Potentially damaging soybean
aphids have been detected in several central and western
counties of New York state, according to Cornell University
entomologists. The insect has infested several other
agricultural states since last summer, particularly Michigan,
Wisconsin, Minnesota and Illinois.
Soybean fields in New York state have been surveyed at random by
Cornell entomologists since June 28. They found low numbers of
the soybean aphids (Aphis glycines Matsumura) in Cayuga, Erie,
Genesee, Monroe, Niagara, Ontario, Orleans, Seneca, Wayne,
Onondaga, Oswego, Jefferson, Tompkins and Yates counties.
At risk is the expanding New York soybean industry. Once
minuscule, soybean acreage in New York has grown to about
140,000 acres this year from an estimated 40,000 acres in 1990,
according to statistics from the New York State Department of
Agriculture and Markets. Dairy
producers use soybeans as a rotation crop, as a source of
livestock feed and as a cash crop option. Last year's New York
receipts for soybeans totaled $22.4 million.
"This is a growing industry in New York, and we want to keep on
top of new pest problems as they arise," says John Losey,
Cornell assistant professor of entomology and the state's
primary
investigator in the Multi-State Soybean Aphid Survey, funded by
the Northeast Region Soybean Promotion Board. "We have only been
sampling for several weeks, so we don't yet know the extent or
severity of the infestation."
Soybean pest concerns have been small in the Northeast,
according to Keith Waldron, Cornell's New York State Integrated
Pest Management Coordinator for livestock and field crops and a
co-investigator on the aphid survey. "Given our northeastern
pest spectrum, most pest impacts can largely be minimized or
avoided through an integrated approach based on selecting
varieties for maturity group, disease resistance, commercial
attributes and the timely implementation of sound agronomic
practices including crop rotation," he says.
Fortunately, the aphids have a natural enemy: ladybugs, which
can eat as many as 5,000 aphids in a lifetime. Scouting is the
best way to find the aphids. "Given our complement of potential
pests, field monitoring is most efficient when conducted during
crop emergence, mid-vegetative and reproductive growth stages,"
Waldron says.
As part of the their participation in the aphid survey, the
Cornell scientists have hired undergraduate students Lee E.
MacOmber, a senior from Hatfield, Pa., and Brett N. Scott, a
senior from Atlanta, to conduct a field-by-field search for the
aphids. So far, MacOmber and Scott generally have had very few
aphids per leaf. E. Richard Hoebeke, assistant curator of
Cornell's Entomology Collection, has made positive
identification of the aphids. Entomologists first
reported finding the aphids in North America last July, when
they were discovered in Wisconsin soybean fields. Subsequently,
the aphids were found in Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri,
Ohio, West Virginia, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania,
Minnesota, Florida and, most recently, in Ontario, Canada.
The aphids have the potential to transmit any number of
infectious viruses from one field to another. These viruses
include alfalfa mosaic, soybean mosaic, bean yellow mosaic,
peanut mottle, peanut stunt and peanut stripe. However,
transmission of these agricultural viruses has yet to be
documented in the United States.
Native to China and Japan, the soybean aphid is a tiny,
pear-shaped, yellow arthropod with distinct black cornicles,
which are wax-secreting tubes that project out from its
abdominal area. It lives on the stems and young leaves of
soybean plants.
The aphids produce as many as 15 to 18 generations each year.
Nymphs hatch in the spring. After two generations of wingless
females, a generation of winged females migrates from buckthorn
shrubs in search of soybean plants, according to the North
Central Pest Management Center in East Lansing, Mich. During the
summer, a series of wingless generations develop in the soybean
fields followed by a winged generation that departs its host
plant in search of other soybean plants.
By the autumn, the winged female aphids migrate back to
buckthorn, their winter host. These females then produce a
generation of wingless females that lay eggs near the buds on
buckthorn twigs.
Survey efforts will concentrate on early and rapid detection of
the soybean aphid throughout the state. The Cornell scientists
are sharing their findings with other entomologists in the
Northeast,
with state agencies and with the USDA's National Agricultural
Pest Information System and the agency's Cooperative
Agricultural Pest Survey and Animal Plant Health Inspection
Service.
The web version of this release may be found at
http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/July01/Aphid.bpf.html
Cornell University News Service
Surge 3
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
607-255-4206
cunews@cornell.edu
http://www.news.cornell.edu
Cornell U news release
N3669
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