Survey of Adult Corn Rootworm Populations in Rotated Cornfields and Relationship to Larval Damage to the Subsequent Corn Crop

dc.contributor.author Tollefson, Jon
dc.contributor.author Baker, David
dc.contributor.author Rouse, Jim
dc.contributor.author Oleson, James
dc.date 2018-08-10T18:16:34.000
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-30T04:39:47Z
dc.date.available 2020-06-30T04:39:47Z
dc.date.issued 1991-12-04
dc.description.abstract <p>Research by Chiang (1965) and Krysan et al. (1984) has demonstrated that eggs of the northern corn rootworm, Djabrotica barberi, are capable of remaining in diapause for longer than a single winter chill period. Subsequently, researchers in several northern Corn Belt states have used controlled environmental and field experiments to confirm the presence of what has come to be known as "extended diapause." In 1986 Krysan et al. used empirical evidence provided fortuitously by the Payment-In-Kind program to attribute larval damage in rotated field corn to northern corn rootworms with the extended diapause trait. During 1987 the incidence in Iowa of corn rootworm larval damage in corn grown in an annual rotation with another crop, usually soybeans, made its third consecutive, dramatic increase. The probability of farmers responding by applying a prophylactic soil-insecticide treatment to rotated corn stimulated the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture to support a three-year survey of the seriousness of extended diapause in Northwest Iowa.</p>
dc.identifier archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/icm/1991/proceedings/16/
dc.identifier.articleid 1368
dc.identifier.contextkey 11922334
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.31274/icm-180809-363
dc.identifier.s3bucket isulib-bepress-aws-west
dc.identifier.submissionpath icm/1991/proceedings/16
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/43272
dc.relation.ispartofseries Proceedings of the Integrated Crop Management Conference
dc.source.bitstream archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/icm/1991/proceedings/16/ICM_1991_16.pdf|||Fri Jan 14 20:52:52 UTC 2022
dc.subject.disciplines Agriculture
dc.subject.disciplines Entomology
dc.title Survey of Adult Corn Rootworm Populations in Rotated Cornfields and Relationship to Larval Damage to the Subsequent Corn Crop
dc.type event
dc.type.genre event
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isSeriesOfPublication a6494274-4b7d-4cb6-a3ef-de862ab57a21
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