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Drought Reduces Wheat Midge Populations for Second Year

By Jan Knodel
 
This is the second year in a row with good news for North Dakota wheat producers.
 
Wheat midge likely will be less of a problem this year, reducing the need for insecticide applications.
 
Soil samples in North Dakota indicate low levels of overwintering wheat midge larvae (cocoons) for the 2018 season, according to Janet Knodel, North Dakota State University Extension entomologist.
 
A total of 2,000 soil samples were collected from 21 counties in the fall of 2018 to estimate the regional risk for wheat midge in the 2019 field season. The distribution of wheat midge is based on unparasitized cocoons found in the soil samples.
 
“Less than one percent of the soil samples had economic population densities of wheat midge (greater than 500 midge larvae per square meter) this past year,” Knodel says. “The hot spot was located in one soil sample in the central area of both Burke and Ward counties in North Dakota. The majority of the soil samples, 84 percent, had zero wheat midge cocoons, which is a new record low for the wheat midge larval survey since it has been conducted in 1995.”
 
Knodel adds, “This is the second year in a row with good news for North Dakota wheat producers as it will reduce the likelihood that insecticide will be needed for wheat midge control in wheat in 2019.”
 
Wheat midge populations ranged from zero to 607 larvae per square meter, with an average of 17 larvae per square meter in 2018. Wheat midge populations were slightly higher in 2017 and 2016, ranging from zero to 1,321 in 2017 and 2,071 larvae per square meter in 2016.
 
“Other areas with low wheat midge populations (200 to 500 larvae per square meter) occurred in one small pocket in west-central Ward County,” says Knodel. “These population levels are still considered noneconomic and low risk for wheat midge.”
 
Knodel believes that the drought in the northwestern and north-central areas of North Dakota caused high mortality to wheat midge for the last two years. Larvae are susceptible to dryness and require dew or rain to drop out of the wheat heads and dig into the soil to overwinter as cocoons.
 
Knodel notes, “It is always good integrated pest management to scout for wheat midge adults during emergence, especially if wheat fields are in the heading to early flowering (less than 50 percent flowering) crop stage, the susceptible time period for wheat midge infestation.”
 
A wheat midge degree-day model predicts the emergence of wheat midge, and helps producers to determine when to scout and if their wheat crop is at risk. Producers can access the online wheat midge degree-day model on the North Dakota Agricultural Weather Network (NDAWN) at https://ndawn.ndsu.nodak.edu/wheat-growing-degree-days.html.
 
To use the model, select your nearest NDAWN station and enter your wheat planting date. The output indicates the expected growth stage of the wheat and whether it is susceptible to midge infestation, as well as how far along the wheat midge emergence is, such as 50 percent females emerged.
 
Scouting for the orange adult flies should be conducted at night when temperatures are greater than 59 F and the winds are less than 6 mph. Use a flashlight and slowly scan the heads of wheat plants for wheat midge adults, counting the number of flies per head.
 
The economic thresholds for wheat midge are: one or more midge observed for every four or five heads on hard red spring wheat, or one or more midge observed for every seven or eight heads on durum wheat.
 
Knodel says, “The sad news for 2018 is that the beneficial parasitic wasp, Macroglenes penetrans, which naturally controls wheat midge eggs and larvae, continues to be at record lows with only a 4.8 percent parasitism rate in 2018. The parasitism rate has been low since 2015 - 4.2 percent in 2017, 4.8 percent in 2016 and 3.7 percent in 2015. Ninety-one percent of the larval cocoons had zero incidence of parasitism in 2018.”
 
2018 Wheat Midge Larval Survey - Midge Per Square Meter
 
2018 Wheat Midge Larval Survey - Percent Parasitism
 
The highest parasitism rates were observed in Divide, McLean and Nelson counties. Because the parasitic wasp is dependent on its host, wheat midge, its populations decreased as midge populations also decreased during the past few years.
 
Knodel emphasizes, “We need to continue to conserve parasitic wasp populations by scouting for wheat midge and spraying insecticides only when wheat midge populations are at economic threshold levels. Parasitic wasps fly later than wheat midge, so avoiding any late insecticide applications also will reduce the negative impacts on these ‘good’ insects. This tiny, metallic wasp does an excellence job keeping the wheat midge in check by providing free biological control of wheat midge in wheat fields."
 

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Moving Ag Research Forward Through Collaboration

Video: Moving Ag Research Forward Through Collaboration



BY: Ashley Robinson

It may seem that public and private researchers have different goals when it comes to agricultural research. However, their different strategies can work in tandem to drive agricultural research forward. Public research may focus more on high-risk and applied research with federal or outside funding, while private sector researchers focus more on research application.

“For me, the sweet spot for public private sector research is when we identify problems and collaborate and can use that diverse perspective to address the different aspects of the challenge. Public sector researchers can work on basic science high risk solutions as tools and technologies are developed. They then can work with their private sector partners who prototype solutions,” Mitch Tuinstra, professor of plant breeding and genetics in Purdue University’s Department of Agronomy, said during the Jan. 10 episode of Seed Speaks.

Public researchers they have the flexibility to be more curiosity driven in their work and do discovery research. This is complimentary to private research, which focuses on delivering a product, explained Jed Christianson, canola product design lead for Bayer CropScience, explained during the episode.

“As a seed developer, we worry about things like new crop diseases emerging. Having strong public sector research where people can look into how a disease lifecycle cycle works, how widespread is it and what damage it causes really helps inform our product development strategies,” he added.

It’s not always easy though to develop these partnerships. For Christianson, it’s simple to call up a colleague at Bayer and start working on a research project. Working with someone outside of his company requires approvals from more people and potential contracts.

“Partnerships take time, and you always need to be careful when you're establishing those contracts. For discoveries made within the agreement, there need to be clear mechanisms for sharing credits and guidelines for anything brought into the research to be used in ways that both parties are comfortable with,” Christianson said.

Kamil Witek, group leader of 2Blades, a non-profit that works with public and private ag researchers, pointed out there can be limitations and challenges to these partnerships. While private researchers are driven by being able to make profits and stay ahead of competitors, public researchers may be focused on information sharing and making it accessible to all.

“The way we deal with this, we work in this unique dual market model. Where on one hand we work with business collaborators, with companies to deliver value to perform projects for them. And at the same time, we return the rights to our discoveries to the IP to use for the public good in developing countries,” Witek said during the episode.

At the end of the day, the focus for all researchers is to drive agricultural research forward through combining the knowledge, skills and specializations of the whole innovation chain, Witek added.

“If there's a win in it for me, and there's a win in it for my private sector colleagues in my case, because I'm on the public side, it’s very likely to succeed, because there's something in it for all of us and everyone's motivated to move forward,” Tuinstra said.