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Duane Dailey
Senior Writer
573-882-9181
DaileyD@missouri.edu
July 13, 2005
First soybean aphids found in Missouri fields;
migration expected to increase third week of July
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Farmers scouting fields for Asian soybean rust may
find another pest from the Far East first, said a University of
Missouri entomologist. Soybean aphids, formerly known as Chinese
aphids, are in low numbers across Missouri.
"Winged stages of the aphid are being found, indicating they
migrated from northern states," said Wayne Bailey, with MU
Extension. "We have a very limited winter population found on
buckthorn shrubs, an alternate host."
Northern states and Canada had higher than usual overwintering
populations this year, Bailey said. Aphids arrived in Missouri
earlier than usual.
"We should see our largest migrations in the third and fourth weeks
of July," Bailey said.
Huge colonies, with thousands of aphids per plant, can build up
quickly under favorable conditions. Aphids suck juice from soybean
plants reducing yields or even killing the plants.
Most of the year aphids are wingless. However, when aphids reach
some stress level in a field they develop wings and fly up where
winds carry them to new fields. "We don't know what triggers
migration, which can be for hundreds of miles," Bailey said. "Some
entomologists think it has to do with population density and day
length.
"If we have a few days of north winds, we could see a huge flight of
soybean aphids into the state."
Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin have had crop losses from the aphid in
past years, but Missouri has been lucky, Bailey said. "With huge
populations north of us, we may get our first heavy infestations
this year."
The economic threshold for spraying the crop for pest control is 250
aphids per soybean plant. "We can reach damaging numbers in only a
few days," Bailey said. "The aphids give live birth and produce a
new generation every couple of days."
Scouting for aphids requires a hand lens with 10X or greater
magnification. The light green, almost colorless, aphids appear
first on bottoms of lower leaves and on plant stems.
"Soybean aphids are distinguished by two black 'tail pipes,'" Bailey
said. "They are the only aphids that colonize soybeans."
Aphid colonies produce honeydew that grows a black mold. "Walking
though an infected field can result in black smudges on pant legs,"
Bailey said.
The only thing that might slow the aphid invasion is hot, dry,
weather. "Aphids prefer cooler, moister conditions than we usually
have in Missouri," Bailey said.
Areas that received rain are more likely to see aphid colonies
develop first. "Aphids prefer lush growth," Bailey told regional
extension agronomists on a crop teleconference from the MU campus in
Columbia.
So far, beneficial insects have kept aphid infestations in check.
Ladybugs and insidious flower bugs, also known as minute pirate
bugs, eat aphids as they arrive on the soybean plants.
"A huge migration could overwhelm our biological defense," Bailey
said. "This is just one more thing that soybean growers don't need."
Drought, followed by spider mites, has reduced growth of soybeans in
a band of counties across the state from the southwest to the
northeast.
Growers have increased watchfulness over their fields following
passage of the remnants of Hurricane Dennis. The storm tracked over
southern states, from Florida to Alabama, where Asian soybean rust
had been identified in soybean fields. Winds were expected to pick
up rust spores and carry them north.
Source: Wayne Bailey (573) 882-2838
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