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Sweet
Corn > Biointensive Insect Management in Sweet Corn
By Ruth Hazzard and Pam Westgate, Department of Entomology, University
of Massachusetts
INTRODUCTION
When customers flock to markets in search of sweet corn, they want it
ot be of the highest quality -- sweet, fresh, and worm-free. Yet, in ecological
or organic production of sweet corn, achieveing worm-free corn is one
of the most difficult challenges. Three major caterpillar pests -- corn
earworm, European corn borer, and fall armyworm -- invade ears and cause
ugly feeding damage. Without effective controls, it is impossible to produce
high quality corn throughout the season.
Organic pest management relies upon a variety of methods to reduce pest
populations below economically damaging levels. Crop rotation, tillage
of previous crop residues, mechanical barriers such as floating row covers,
planting resistant or tolerant varieties, conservation of existing beneficial
organisms, and releases of mass-reared beneficials are all compatible
with the methods described here, and may further enhance ear quality.
This fact sheet discusses an integrated strategy for controlling these
three caterpillar species, using methods that meet current certification
standards for organic production. Any grower interested in methods that
are safe for the applicator and the environment may be interested in this
approach. The two components of this strategy are 1) a direct treatment
of each ear with vegetable oil mixed with Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt),
and 2) foliar applications of Bt. Used with IPM scouting methods and thresholds,
these can provide cost-effective control of key caterpillar pests througout
the season.
CORN EARWORM
The corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea, CEW) is a widespread pest, which is
also known as tomato fruitworm on tomato, and cotton bollworm in cotton
and tobacco. In southern areas of the United States, corn earworm overwinters
and infests sweet corn throughout the season. Corn earworm moths reach
northern states through annual migrations, invading late-season corn from
mid-July through September. In New England, large numbers of moths can
arrive suddenly on storm fronts that move up the coastline and river valleys.
The heaviest numbers are found in coastal areas, but corn earworm can
be a devastating pest in late-season corn anywhere in the northeastern
U.S.
Adult moths have light tan scales and are about 1 1/4 inches in length.
Distinctive features are a dark dot on the forewing, a dark band near
the margin of the hindwing, and bright green eyes.
Female moths lay single cream-colored, globe-shaped eggs on the silk
as well as other parts of the plant. They are attracted to the odor of
corn silk, though dried silks are less attractive than fresh silk as egg-laying
sites. They lay an average of 5.5 eggs per day over their 7-14 day life
span. Eggs hatch in 3-7 days, depending on temperature, and newly hatched
larvae move down the silk and into the ears to feed at the tip of the
ear. Unlike European corn borer and fall armyworm, earworm larvae do not
tunnel through the husk to reach the ear.
Corn earworm larvae may be brown, tan, green, or pink, with light and
dark longitudinal stripes. The head capsule is always plain golden brown,
and there are small bumps and hairs which give the body a rough texture.
Caterpillars reach 1 1/2 to 2 inches when full grown.
Monitoring and thresholds. Pheromone traps are a critical IPM tool for
monitoring CEW flight activity. The Scentry Heliothis net trap, baited
with Hercontm luretapes for CEW, is reliable and effective. The trap should
be placed in freshly silking corn with the base at about ear height. Lures
are suspended in an opening at the base of the trap and replaced every
two weeks. When the silk dries, move the trap to a new block of corn in
fresh silk. Trap captures of two moths per week indicate that a damaging
population of CEW is present. Damage will increase as trap captures rise.
Two sources for these traps and lures are Great Lakes IPM (1-517-268-5693)
and Gemplers (1-800-382-8473).
CONTROLLING CORN EARWORM
Direct Silk Application of Oils. An effective way to control corn earworm
infestation in corn ears is to apply a small amount of vegetable oil mixed
with Bt directly to the silk of maturing corn ears. Oil applied directly
to the silks in the neck of the ear acts as a barrier and a toxin, rapidly
killing caterpillars that encounter the oil, thereby controlling larvae
before they cause damage inside the ear. This technique was widely used
by sweet corn growers in the 1940's, before the development of effective
foliar insecticides and organic standards. Research conducted at the University
of Massachusetts, Hampshire College, and farms throughout New England,
has re-examined this technique and developed some improvements on previous
methods. The following recommendations are based on this work:
1. Vegetable oil gives effective control. Use vegetable oils that meet
Federal organic regulations. While we have primarily used corn oil in
our trials, both corn and soybean oil are exempt from FIFRA (Section 25b,
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act). This means that they
can be used on food crops without a pesticide label or registration. EPA
regulations also exempt corn and soybean oil from food residue tolerance
requirements. In addition, these oils are allowed under organic certification
standards.
2. Mixing a Bt product with the oil improves control. If larvae begin
to feed on oil-treated silk or ear tips they ingest Bt, cease feeding,
and die. Use a product that is labeled for sweet corn. Test the product
to be sure it will dissolve or form a suspension in oil: continuous agitation
may be needed. In liquid Bt products, a ratio of 1 part Bt to 20 parts
oil is as effective as more concentrated solutions of Bt and results in
application rates within the labeled rates per acre. Check with your certifier
or the National Organic Standards Board to be sure that the Bt you want
to use is acceptable.
3. The best time to apply oil is 5-6 days after silk growth starts, or
3-4 days after the silk is fully-grown. At this time, the tips of the
silks have begun to wilt and turn brown, and pollination is nearly complete.
Although caterpillars that are already in the ear may be killed by the
oil/Bt application, the best control is achieved when the oil is present
prior to larval entry. The oil/Bt barrier persists after application and
continues to kill newly entering larvae.
Within a field, plants grow at different rates and begin silking at different
times. In a relatively even stand, silk emergence is concentrated in a
3-4 day period. To determine the best time for oil applications, note
the day on which 50% of the corn has begun to show silk, and count from
that date.
Applications made earlier than 5 days after silk do not appear to give
better control, but may result in a higher rate of "cone" tips.
This occurs when oil interferes with silk pollination resulting in unfilled
kernels in the last half-inch of the tip. While partially filled tips
are a relatively common occurrence in sweet corn, cone tips caused by
oil are more pronounced.
Oil applied later than 8 days after silk initiation can result in more
feeding damage to the kernels caused by caterpillars that entered the
ear prior to the oil. There is a window between 5 and 8 days after silk
initiation that provides the best combination of corn earworm control
and ear fill.
4. Use 0.5 ml per ear. This is equivalent to 5 drops from an eyedropper.
Apply it directly to the silk at the tip of the ear so that it will coat
the silk channel. Higher quantities do not appear to give better control,
but may cause slightly oily ears at harvest. The Zea-later hand held applicator
described below delivers 0.5ml per ear.
5. One application per ear is adequate. Treat each block when most ears
are close to the ideal stage. It is cost-effective to treat only one ear
per stalk. If silk emergence is very uneven throughout the field, it may
be necessary to go through the stand a second time to treat late-emerging
silks and achieve optimal control without tip fill problems.
6. A hand-held applicator is needed to deliver oil to each ear. Oil sprays
are phytotoxic and result in sticky brown husks. There is no way to avoid
taking time to apply the oil to each ear. The Zea-later, a hand-held applicator
designed at the University of Massachusetts and Hampshire College for
this purpose, is being distributed by Johnny's Selected Seeds (207-437-4395).
This device is comfortable to hold and use, and delivers 0.5ml of oil
with each squeeze of the trigger. Tubing connects the device with a 2
liter bottle for the oil that can be strapped around your waist for convenience.
7. The cost of this method including labor and materials is approximately
$120 per acre. Labor is about 8 to 10 hours per acre and materials include
about 2 gallons of oil and 1 pint Bt per acre.
EUROPEAN CORN BORER
European corn borer (Ostrinia nubilalis, ECB) is a resident pest that
has two generations per year in most of New England. Larvae overwinter
in stalks of corn and other host plants and pupate in the spring. Adult
moths emerge in late May or early June and mate in weedy or grassy areas.
About one week after flight begins, females start to lay flat, white
egg masses on the underside of leaves in early corn. Eggs hatch in about
one week, depending on temperature. Larvae feed in the whorl and in the
succulent emerging tassel. As the corn matures, these larvae move downward,
bore into the stalk and tunnel into ears through the side or tip. When
moths are active during silking, eggs are laid on leaves near the ear
and larvae move directly into the ear.
Larvae are light colored, with a pattern of small dark spots on each segment.
The head capsule is black or dark brown. Full-grown larvae are 3/4 to
1 inch long.
Monitoring and thresholds. ECB flight can be monitored with two Scentrytm
Heliothis net traps baited with E (II) or Z (I) lures, placed at least
50 feet apart in weedy borders of corn fields with the bottom at weed
height. Both types of lures are needed in New England because both E and
Z strains are present.
Once flight is detected, corn with newly emerging tassels should be scouted
weekly by inspecting the tassels of 50-100 plants, in groups of ten, for
the presence of ECB larvae. If more than 15% of the plants have one or
more larvae present, then ear damage will be greater than 5% at harvest
if ECB is not controlled.
FALL ARMYWORM
Like corn earworm, fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda, FAW) moths do
not overwinter in New England, but migrate into the area in mid to late
summer. Larvae are smooth, brown or dark green with lengthwise stripes,
and the head capsule is dark with a distinctive light-colored marking
in the form of an inverted Y. Full-grown larvae reach 1 1/2 inches. They
eat through the side of the corn ear, generally making a large, messy
opening.
Monitoring and thresholds. Watch whorl-stage corn for signs of ragged
feeding damage and scout for larvae in the whorl and the emerging tassel.
The scouting method and threshold for FAW is the same as for ECB: if 15%
of plants are infested with either ECB or FAW, controls are needed.
CONTROLLING EUROPEAN CORN BORER AND FALL ARMYWORM
Using Bt's. Foliar sprays with products containing Bacillus thuringiensis
subspecies kurstaki give good control of ECB. For FAW, look for products
which contain B.t. aizawi or which have fall armyworm listed on the label.
Foliar sprays should be applied just before or during tassel emergence
but before silking and before larvae move into the ear or stalk. Here
are some tips when using Bt products for ECB and FAW control in corn:
1. Apply when infestation exceeds 15%; re-scout to determine the need
for further sprays.
2. Apply at 5-7 day intervals. Shorter intervals should not be necessary.
3. Use at least 2/3 the maximum label rate. Low rates could result in
poor control.
4. Configure your sprayer to get good coverage of the tassel, foliage
and ear zones. Drop nozzles are recommended. Test with water-sensitive
cards.
5. Using a spreader-sticker may give you better control and is recommended.
6. During silking, if ECB moths are active (pheromone trap captures >5
per week), continue weekly applications.
7. Bt products can be used whenever ECB or FAW are the target pests, regardless
of the time of season or stage of crop growth. Bt foliar sprays will not
control corn earworm.
INTEGRATED CONTROL OF LATE-SEASON CATERPILLARS
During August and September, it is common to have two or three of the
key caterpillar pests in the field at the same time. ECB and FAW may be
feeding at the tassel stage and can move into ears during silking. Some
enter ears through the tips and some through the side. CEW enters only
through the tip, and only during silking. An integrated strategy that
has provided effective control of all of these pests in experimental trials
is the following:
1. Pretassel/tassel stage: Scout for ECB and FAW. If infestation is greater
than 15%, make two foliar applications of Bt, 5-7 days apart.
2. At the beginning of the silk stage, if CEW is present, use the oil
method to control all caterpillars that enter through the tip.
CONSERVATION OF NATURAL ENEMIES
Sweet corn harbors numerous predators and parasites of caterpillar eggs
and small larvae as well as of corn leaf aphid, another key pest. These
include ladybeetles, insidious flower bugs, lacewing larvae, and aphid
parasitoids. The methods described here are non-toxic to natural enemies
and encourage the buildup of existing populations. These in turn will
contribute to suppression of caterpillars and other pests such as aphids.
FURTHER REFERENCES
Available from the UMass Extension Bookstore, Draper Hall, U. Mass. Amherst,
MA 01003-2010. 413-545-2716:
Managing Sweet Corn Pests in Massachusetts. 1988. UMass Extension Bulletin
AG-335:88-2M. $1.50 Life cycle, monitoring, management of key insect pests;
color photos; sprayer design.
VIDEO: Sweet Corn IPM: Insect Management. 1995. Demonstrates monitoring
with traps and field scouting, thresholds. $15.00
Using Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Products for European Corn Borer Control
in Sweet Corn 1997. Pub. # C-220. Report on three-year study of Bt effectiveness,
recommendations for Bt use. $3.00
Available from Resource Center, U-35, 1376 Storrs Rd., Univ. of CT, Storrs,
CT 06260-4035:
Northeast Sweet Corn Production and Integrated Pest Management Manual.
1996. Univ. of Conn. Cooperative Extension. 120-pg. manual covers all
aspects of sweet corn management. $19.50.
University of Massachusetts Extension
Vegetable and Small Fruit Program
VegSF 2-01
Up-dated and Printed May 2001
Where trade names or commercial products are used, no company or product
endorsement is implied or intended. Always read the label before using
any pesticide. The label is the legal document for product use. Disregard
any information in this newsletter if it is in conflict with the label.
Selected IPM Articles:
2001
Annual Report 
INSECT
MANAGEMENT
Insect Management in Peppers
Except from the New England Vegetable
Management Guide 
CRUCIFERS
Broccoli, Cabbage, Cauliflower, and
Minor Cole Crops 
Rutabaga and Turnip 
CUCURBITS
Managing Insects
and Diseases in Pumpkins and Winter Squash
IPM Guidelines for Pumpkins
POTATO
IPM Guidelines
Excerpt from the New England Vegetable Management
Guide 
SWEET CORN
IPM
Guidelines
Excerpt from the New England Vegetable Management
Guide 
Bio Intensive Insect Management
in Sweet Corn
Caterpillar Control
in Organic Sweet Corn
Integrated Caterpillar
Control in Organic Sweet Corn: Results of On-farm Trials, 2000
Integrated Caterpillar
Control in Organic Sweet Corn: Results of On-farm Trials ,1999
Using Bacillus thruingiensis
(Bt) Products for European Corn Borer Control in Sweet Corn
Bt Product List
Assessment of Sweet Corn IPM
Adoption in New England & Mid-Atlantic States
TOMATO
IPM Guidelines - Field
TomatoesIPM Guidelines
- Greenhouse Tomatoes
Excerpt from the New England Vegetable
Management Guide - Field Tomatoes
Excerpt from the New England Vegetable
Management Guide - Greenhouse Tomatoes
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