Rotation-Resistant Corn Rootworms 2006

Thumbnail Image
Date
2006-11-30
Authors
Tollefson, Jon
Prasifka, Patricia
Kaeb, Benjamin
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Altmetrics
Authors
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Series
Proceedings of the Integrated Crop Management Conference
Iowa State University Conferences and Symposia

The Iowa State University Integrated Crop Management Conference is Iowa's premier crop production education event. No other program in Iowa brings together the diverse range of topics, slate of expert presenters and results of the latest University research.

The ICM Conference offers workshops focusing on the latest in crop production technology. Experts from Iowa and surrounding states will provide research updates and results in soil fertility, soil and water management, crop production and pest management.

Department
Abstract

Corn rootworms have been, and in many cases still can be, managed with crop rotations. However, some populations of both northern and western corn rootworms (CRWs) have adapted to the com-soybean rotation. Regular, annual rotations between corn and soybeans have selected for a variant of the northern CRW that has a two-year life cycle, referred to as extended diapause. Female northern CRWs deposit eggs in the soil within cornfields. When the field is rotated to soybean the next year, most eggs hatch and the larvae starve. However, a portion of the eggs remain dormant in the soil for a second winter and do not hatch until the following spring when corn is planted back into the field resulting in damage to the rotated corn. Extended-diapause northern CRWs originally caused severe injury to rotated corn in NW Iowa, SW Minnesota, SE South Dakota, and NE Nebraska during the late 1980s. Since then their range has expanded until it is now found throughout most of Iowa. South Dakota has estimated that nearly 50% of their northern CRWs are the extended-diapause variant.

Comments
Description
Keywords
Citation
Source
Subject Categories
Copyright