Pesticide and Environmental Update
Fungus,
Corn Plants Team Up To Stymie Borer Pest
The struggle against the European corn borer is a chapter in the
never-ending story of farmers trying to save their crops from destruction.
This struggle has been tough for farmers managing small acreages,
especially those who grow crops with little or no chemical pesticides.
But now two allies may help defeat the corn borer: Beauveria bassiana,
a long-established and well-known fungus, and the common corn plant, Zea
mays. Agricultural Research Service scientists have found that the fungus
can live within the corn plant in a relationship that doesn't hurt the
corn but is lethal to many corn borers.
The borer
larvae feed on the inside of the cornstalk, weakening the plant and
reducing yields up to 30 percent. Weakened stalks fall over more easily,
contributing to even greater yield losses.
In laboratory tests, scientists at the ARS Corn Insects and Crop
Genetics Laboratory in Ames, Iowa, observed that up to 97 percent of corn
borer larvae were killed when they fed on corn plants colonized with
Beauveria fungus. Scientists "seeded" the young corn plants with
Beauveria to enhance its natural occurrenceand to coincide with the
expected first flight of corn borer moths.
In field trials, the borer mortality rate was lower but still
significant, and the Beauveria-treated corn plants had up to 53 percent
less borer damage than untreated control plots.
Leslie C. Lewis, an ARS entomologist at Ames, notes that researchers
have long known the fungus was lethal to corn borers. "It's
Beauveria's relationship with the corn plant that surprised us," he
says. "We have found no scientific evidence to date showing that the
fungus harms the corn plant."
Lewis says more studies will be needed to learn the exact way in which
Beauveria interacts with the plant to protect against corn borers.
Meanwhile, farmers who participated in the study say they welcome new
developments that enable them to use sustainable practices and keep down
costs.
"We'd definitely like to see more of this type of control,"
says Steven Brunk, a grower near Eldora, Iowa. He farms 480 acres using a
corn and soybean rotation with ridge tillage--a cultivation system that
uses ridges of soil to reduce erosion by water. He says using biological
controls for insects is important in holding down costs.
Near Cumming, Iowa, Dennis McLaughlin farms corn, soybean, oats, and
alfalfa. On about 180 acres, he uses practices that control weeds,
insects, and erosion with a minimum of tillage and chemicals.
He says Beauveria appeals to him because it is naturally occurring.
Both farmers are members of the Practical Farmers of Iowa, a group of
farmers committed to using sustainable farming practices. Rick Exner,
farming systems coordinator for the Iowa State University Extension
Service and PFI adviser, says use of Beauveria and other biological
controls fits in with the sustainable systems approach.
"In corn production practices, unless you are getting a premium
price for a niche market product, it comes down to the bottom line,"
he says. "The smaller producers can't afford to be extravagant, any
more than the larger ones." --By Dawn Lyons-Johnson, Agricultural
Research Service Information Staff, 1815 North University Street, Peoria,
IL 61604, phone (309) 681-6534.
Leslie C. Lewis is in the USDA-ARS Corn Insects and Crop Genetics
Research Unit, Genetics Laboratory, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011;
phone (515) 294-8614, fax (515) 294-2265.
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