Volume
3 Issue 2
May 23, 2006
Crops are Emerging . . . Must be
Cutworm Time!
There have been reports of cutworms in
sugar beet from Moorhead, Crookston, Hillsboro and MinnDak. This
is the expected timing for Red-Backed and Dark-Sided
cutworms in beets; both occur in the Red River Valley and
they have similar life cycles. They both over-winter
as eggs laid by the adult moths in cultivated fields at
the end of summer. The following late May/early June, the
eggs hatch and the caterpillars move onto seedling crops.
Scouting
– Early detection is important with this
insect. Cutworms feed mostly in the evening and at night
and so are sometimes difficult to locate in the
daytime. Their feeding (Figure
1), usually at or
below ground level, causes wilting, death and sugar beet
seedlings are often cut off near ground level. Scouting
for these worrisome worms is best done by looking for
wilting or dying plants and then looking in the top 1”-2”
of soil at the base of these plants.
Thresholds & Treatment – An economic
return on treatment can be expected when 4% - 5% of beets
seedlings are cut in a field. Pesticides are best
applied in the evening as it results in high levels of
insecticide being present during the cutworms’ period of
greatest activity. High humidity, dew and light rains
(mist) can carry the insecticide over the plant surfaces
and into the soil to increase contact with the insect. For
the same reason, liquid formulations tend to be more
effective against cutworms. To assist in delivering the
insecticide to the caterpillars, break up severe soil
crusting prior to, or during application. Table
1 lists the insecticides labeled in 2006 for
controlling cutworms on sugar beet.
For more information, go to the Red River
IPM site at:
http://www.nwes.umn.edu/ent/redent.html
. . . A Little bit More on Cutworms
Several
cutworm species affect regional crops (Figure
2). Dingy cutworms, Feltia jaculifera,
overwinter as partially grown larvae. They are the first
cutworm species to cause problems during crop emergence,
anytime from late April to late May. Female moths of the
dingy cutworm are known to lay eggs on sunflower heads and
other late-summer flowering plants from mid-July through
September. Crops following sunflowers in rotation are at
greatest risk of injury from this species. Other high risk
sites in the fall include freshly cultivated weedy fields
or newly seeded winter wheat.
Other cutworms, such as the red-backed, Euxoa
ochregaster, and the dark-sided, Euxoa messoria,
overwinter as eggs that hatch in mid to late May. Eggs are
laid in the fall and survive in weedy, wet and
reduced-tillage areas. Feeding injury from these cutworms
normally occurs in late May to early June.
The black cutworm, Agrotis ipsilon, and the
variegated cutworm, Peridroma saucia, migrate into
the region as adults and occasionally cause problems in
row crops.
Some criteria that can help predict cutworm
problems are:
- field history of cutworm damage;
- surface crop residue from reduced or minimum
tillage;
- bottom land or low spots in the field;
- fair to poor drainage; and
- proximity to shelterbelts or field margins with
grassy ground cover.
Because the most important cutworms lay eggs during
late summer in our region, soil moisture at that time is
important for their winter survival. Growers should be
cautious when planting any crop following pasture, alfalfa
or clover. Cutworm survival may be greater in these types
of locations.
Ian MacRae, U of MN
Extension Entomologist
and
Phillip Glogoza, REE-Crops,
Moorhead
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