Aphids starting to appear in area fields

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Counting soybean aphids is strenuous, tedious work. Jim Donnelly, crops specialist with Ag View FS, said farmers need to check plants in several areas in their fields, and look for a threshold of 250 aphids per plant. Donnelly found an average of five aphids per plant in this field south of Princeton, but warned the population could expand quickly. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)

It’s time for area farmers to drop to their knees in their soybean fields.

No, not to pray for rain, although that might not be a bad idea.

It’s time to begin scouting for soybean aphids.

“Anytime after emergence we start scouting for them,” said Jim Donnelly, crops specialist with Ag View FS. “Soon after emergence all the way through the rest of the year.”

Donnelly said he’s been finding some soybean aphids in the fields, not enough to worry about, but enough to start paying attention.

In a heavy aphid year, such as 2003, aphids started appearing in the V1, V2 and V3 stages, whereas in a light year, the aphids might not appear until the V4 or V5 stages.

Donnelly said scouting for aphids requires meticulous work.

“They’ve very small insects, so it takes some pretty tedious work to actually be going through and counting them,” he said.

What the farmer should look for is a threshold number of aphids per plant, which is about 250 aphids.

Donnelly said farmers shouldn’t wait until there are symptoms before getting into their fields.

“Oftentimes there will be no physical sign of threshold numbers,” he said. “Pretty much when you only have 250 aphids per plant, you do not have any visual symptoms. Only when you get to 500, 1,000 aphids plus do you start to get sooty mold growing on leaves, and the plants get kind of a sappy, sticky appearance.”

When scouting, farmers should check out plants in several different areas of the field, and look for pockets of aphids.

Donnelly has found aphids in several different fields. He said the numbers are relatively light, but it’s also very early in the season.

“It’s a little bit on the early side to see some of the densities I’ve been seeing, but not at all uncommon,” he said.

In a field south of Princeton, Donnelly found about five aphids per plant in stage V4 soybeans.

“That’s relatively low, but consider how fast they double,” he said. “Generally double time is once every two days under optimum conditions.”

Soybean aphids are usually all female, and they give birth to nymphs, or live young, that are clones of their mothers. When temperatures are in the upper 70s and lower 80s, the population can double every two days. When temperatures are hotter, such as they were earlier this month, Donnelly said the aphids’ reproduction rates  drop drastically and their mortality is increased.

Previous Page|1||

Comments


National Video