The Southwest Booster

Insect surveys important for Saskatchew­an producers

- JAMES TANSEY, PHD AAG PROVINCIAL INSECT/PEST MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST, REGINA

To get a sense of the potential threats to Saskatchew­an crop production that insect pests pose, we need to evaluate their population­s. The Ministry of Agricultur­e, in collaborat­ion with Saskatchew­an Crop Insurance Corporatio­n (SCIC), Agricultur­e and Agri-food Canada (AAFC), the University of Saskatchew­an, and other volunteers and contractor­s, determines the regional population levels and timing of arrival of several serious pests of important crops in the province. Results of these surveys contribute to annual forecast maps and timely updates to ministry webpages and to the Prairie Pest Monitoring Network. These results inform research priorities, scouting and grower seed purchase decisions, and contribute to regulatory efforts. The surveys include a variety of pests in the following crops.

Canola and mustard

- Diamondbac­k moth, Plutella xylostella: This insect is pushed along by high-altitude winds from the southeaste­rn United States and Pacific Northwest,

as well as northern Mexico in the spring and early summer. All crop stages are vulnerable to larval feeding. Young larvae mine leaves, and more mature larvae can cause shot-hole damage, can skeletoniz­e leaves and strip pods. We monitor this insect with a network of approximat­ely 40 sentry sites, equipped with sexpheromo­ne-baited traps. These traps allow us a broad assessment of local pressures and the timing of arrival. The earlier the arrival, the greater potential for population increase.

- Cabbage seedpod weevil, Ceutorhync­hus obstrictus: This invasive insect is a serious pest of canola. Adults feed on developing flowers and can cause bud blast. Females lay eggs in developing pods; larvae consume seeds as they grow. Both the entry holes chewed by the females to insert eggs and the exit holes chewed by mature larvae as they emerge from pods can be avenues for disease. Yield and quality can be affected. We monitor this insect annually with in-field sweep samples throughout the province. Results allow us to determine local pressures and spread of the invasion.

- Bertha armyworm, Mamestra configurat­a: This native insect overwinter­s as a pupa and is monitored with a network of approximat­ely 250 pheromone traps. Larvae can be very damaging to foliage and pods. Results of trap catches allow us to determine rough local pressures and the timing of peak emergence. Scouting of individual sites should begin two weeks after peak emergence. This insect has also shown an affinity for quinoa.

- Swede midge, Contarinia nasturtii: These insects have not yet been detected in Saskatchew­an, but, because of the potential threat and their presence in other parts of Canada, we continue to monitor with pheromone traps. Larvae of these little flies cause distorted growth in canola and can affect yields.

Pulses

- Pea leaf weevil, Sitona lineatus in peas: This is another invasive insect, and can cause significan­t yield losses to peas and faba. Although adults can cause damage by feeding on foliage, most yield reduction is associated with larval feeding within Rhizobium nodules. We survey this pest by examining the feeding damage associated with adults in fields throughout the province. This survey allows assessment of local pressures and spread of this insect.

- Lygus spp.: These native insects can be serious pests of faba both as juveniles and adults. Piercing-sucking feeding by these insects can result in significan­t yield and quality reductions. Sampling in 20 fields throughout faba bean growing areas (primarily cropping districts 9, 8, 6A, and 5) are conducted during early August.

Small grains cereals

- Wheat midge, Sitodiplos­is mosellana: Larvae are this insect’s damaging stage and can have a serious impact on yield and quality. Eggs are laid from late June to early July on the plant’s developing heads. Adults are shortlived (usually less than a week) and delicate. Dry conditions do not favour their developmen­t in the spring; they require 25 mm of rain by the end of May for good emergence. There are midge-tolerant wheat varieties available as varietal blends (VB). For 2020, VBS are available in CWRS, CPSR, CWSP, CWSWS, CNHR, CWES and Durum wheat classes. Surveys for these insects occur in the fall in-field throughout the wheat-growing regions of the province.

Generalist pests

- Grasshoppe­rs: Although we have 85 species of grasshoppe­rs in the province, only about five of them are damaging. A good rule of thumb is “if it has wings in the spring, it’s not a pest.” For pest species, host preference­s include cereals, flax, and lentils and other pulses. Canola is less preferred by these animals and soybean can take a lot of foliar feeding before yield is influenced. Typically, thresholds for these species is 10 to 12 per square metre, but in lentil and flax, thresholds are reduced to two per square metre. SCIC conducts a province-wide survey of grasshoppe­r population­s in the late summer and records site-specific hopper counts.

We need your help to conduct our surveys. The ministry has adopted a permission-based survey model, requiring growers to sign up to allow us access to fields. If you are interested in helping with this effort, please sign up.

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