The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BEING BUGGED BLACK-EYED PEAS FACE THREAT FROM WEEVIL

South Georgia crop is often attacked by cowpea curculio.

- By Ann Hardie For the AJC The Sunday Conversati­on is edited for length and clarity. Writer Ann Hardie can be reached by email at ann.hardie@ymail.com.

Here’s hoping those black-eyed peas you chow down this New Year’s bring you good luck. And let’s hope 2017 is also lucky for black-eyed peas. Recent decades haven’t been so great for the Southern favorite, thanks to a weevil called the cowpea curculio. “It is a very real threat in South Georgia,” said Dr. Stormy Sparks, a University of Georgia Extension entomologi­st in Tifton. On Thursday and Friday, Sparks, other entomologi­sts and agricultur­al folks will gather in Savannah to discuss how to attack the weevil and keep black-eyed peas growing in the Southeast. For good luck, Sparks will be eating some black-eyed peas on New Year’s with onions, which is how they do it in Texas where he was raised.

Q: First things first. Do you like black-eyed peas?

A: Oh yeah. There are a lot of names for them — black-eyed peas, crowder peas, field peas, cowpeas, Southern peas. They are all the same thing, more or less.

Q: South Georgia used to be a big producer, correct?

A: Back in the mid-1950s, there were more of them than soybeans. I am not sure of all the factors that changed that but undoubtedl­y, the cowpea curculio is a contributi­ng one. Q: Sounds like black-eyed peas haven’t had the greatest of luck. A: Not recently. The cowpea curculio has always been a major pest of the black-eyed pea. Historical­ly, we have sprayed for it. The problem is that the weevil has developed resistance to various pesticides. Right now, we don’t have any efficaciou­s pesticides against it.

Q: Is there anything organic that can be used?

A: There are some organic products that might have measurable effects on the weevil but nothing that would get anywhere close to providing a commercial­ly acceptable level of control.

Q: Other than luck, what are the upsides to the black-eyed pea?

A: It is drought tolerant so it doesn’t use as much water as some of the other beans and pea types. Other than the cowpea curculio, it doesn’t have many pests. It is a fairly cheap crop to produce and it is a healthy crop for consumptio­n for people and animals. There are a lot of positives.

Q: Would you say the blackeyed pea is lucky for the weevil?

A: We found out a strange thing this year. If you have a really high level of the weevil population and don’t spray at all, the pea plant doesn’t produce pods. That is strange because pods are necessary for the weevil to reproduce. Q: What does that tell you? A: We don’t know. This endangers the plant and it endangers the insect. Mother Nature doesn’t usually do things like that.

Q: What are you and your colleagues hoping to accomplish? A: We are hoping to identify multiple routes where we may be able to manage the weevil. We are still looking for new insecticid­es that may work. There is a geneticall­y modified variety of the crop that is resistant to the weevil but we don’t know if it will be commercial­ly marketable. When this particular weevil leaves the pod, it drops to the ground and pupates. We are looking at possibly attacking that part of the life cycle. Q: Do you respect this weevil? A: I am not sure that respect is the right word. It is not the worst pest I deal with from an insecticid­e resistant standpoint. But it is a tough. Q: What is the worst pest? A: The diamondbac­k moth. It really likes cabbage and collards and has developed resistance to any and every insecticid­e ever developed. I got my first real job in entomology in 1988 and one of the first problems I had to deal with was the resistance of the diamondbac­k moth. Thirty years later, the insect is still one of the biggest problems I deal with. Q: Sounds like that could be a problem for collards. A: While it is difficult, we are still producing plenty of good collards.

 ?? CLEMSON UNIVERSITY ?? The cowpea curculio weevil is a very real threat to Georgia’s black-eyed pea crop.
CLEMSON UNIVERSITY The cowpea curculio weevil is a very real threat to Georgia’s black-eyed pea crop.
 ??  ?? Dr. Stormy Sparks is a University of Georgia Extension entomologi­st.
Dr. Stormy Sparks is a University of Georgia Extension entomologi­st.

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