Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Comparisons of Cotton Boll Injury Caused by Four Species of Boll-Feeding Insects (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae and Miridae)
View through CrossRef
Field experiments with individually caged cotton bolls were conducted in 2013 and 2014 to characterize boll injury from a species complex of boll-feeding insects represented by the verde plant bug, Creontiades signatus (Distant) (Hemiptera: Miridae); redbanded stink bug, Piezodorus guildinii (Westwood); brown stink bug, Euschistus servus (Say); and green stink bug, Chinavia hilaris (Say) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae). Field-collected adult bugs were used individually to infest single cotton bolls of several ages (0-7 days post-anthesis) previously maintained free of insect injury. Individual cotton bolls were infested at mid-bloom for seven days with one bug per boll for each species, and an uninfested control was included. Species and boll age varied across years, allowing selective within-year comparisons. Response to feeding resulted in reduced boll retention, increased boll injury in the form of reduced lint, and increased frequency of boll rot. Results showed that verde plant bugs readily fed on comparatively less mature bolls and feeding decreased boll retention. In contrast, stink bugs fed on larger bolls and caused significant injury. Variation in boll retention, boll injury, cotton boll rot, and yield were associated primarily with species differences and secondarily with boll age from 0 to 7 days old. Boll injury was apparent across species and subsequent yield reduction attributed to insect feeding was detected for all species, except the redbanded stink bug.
Title: Comparisons of Cotton Boll Injury Caused by Four Species of Boll-Feeding Insects (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae and Miridae)
Description:
Field experiments with individually caged cotton bolls were conducted in 2013 and 2014 to characterize boll injury from a species complex of boll-feeding insects represented by the verde plant bug, Creontiades signatus (Distant) (Hemiptera: Miridae); redbanded stink bug, Piezodorus guildinii (Westwood); brown stink bug, Euschistus servus (Say); and green stink bug, Chinavia hilaris (Say) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae).
Field-collected adult bugs were used individually to infest single cotton bolls of several ages (0-7 days post-anthesis) previously maintained free of insect injury.
Individual cotton bolls were infested at mid-bloom for seven days with one bug per boll for each species, and an uninfested control was included.
Species and boll age varied across years, allowing selective within-year comparisons.
Response to feeding resulted in reduced boll retention, increased boll injury in the form of reduced lint, and increased frequency of boll rot.
Results showed that verde plant bugs readily fed on comparatively less mature bolls and feeding decreased boll retention.
In contrast, stink bugs fed on larger bolls and caused significant injury.
Variation in boll retention, boll injury, cotton boll rot, and yield were associated primarily with species differences and secondarily with boll age from 0 to 7 days old.
Boll injury was apparent across species and subsequent yield reduction attributed to insect feeding was detected for all species, except the redbanded stink bug.
Related Results
Boll Shedding and Boll Load in Nitrogen‐Stressed Cotton
Boll Shedding and Boll Load in Nitrogen‐Stressed Cotton
AbstractBoll shedding in cotton is thought to depend on the crop growth rate and the demand for plant assimilates by the growing bolls. This study was designed to test the hypothes...
Boll Retention and Boll Size among Intrasympodial Fruiting Sites in Cotton
Boll Retention and Boll Size among Intrasympodial Fruiting Sites in Cotton
Competition among cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) bolls for assimilates may affect boll retention and size, making it an important factor affecting productivity. A 4‐yr field study ...
Contribution of Boll Mass and Boll Number to Irrigated Cotton Yield
Contribution of Boll Mass and Boll Number to Irrigated Cotton Yield
The production of fruit on upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) varies with environment, cultivar, and management practices, including irrigation. Yield increase in response to ir...
Fruiting Efficiency in Cotton: Boll Size and Boll Set Percentage
Fruiting Efficiency in Cotton: Boll Size and Boll Set Percentage
Cotton plants, Gossypium hirsutum L., initiate more fruiting buds than are matured. This research quantified the boll set percentage and boll size by fruiting site in a population ...
Cotton prediction from weather parameters of different city of Pakistan using machine learning technique
Cotton prediction from weather parameters of different city of Pakistan using machine learning technique
Abstract
This study seeks a distinctive and efficient machine learning system for the prediction of Cotton Production using weather parameters and climate change impact on ...
INSECT NUTRITION
INSECT NUTRITION
Summary1. Recent work has disclosed the nature of many of the accessory growth factors required by insects. Most of the species which have been studied appear to require only one f...
The Cotton Boll: Temporal Susceptibility of the Boll Wall to Stylet Penetration by Hemipteran Pests
The Cotton Boll: Temporal Susceptibility of the Boll Wall to Stylet Penetration by Hemipteran Pests
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is a high‐value cash crop that is injured by various hemipteran insects, including lygus bugs (mirids) and stink bugs (pentatomids). Stink bugs can t...
Development and reproduction of Tetranychus cinnabarinus (Acari: Tetranychiae) on transgenic insect-resistant cotton plants
Development and reproduction of Tetranychus cinnabarinus (Acari: Tetranychiae) on transgenic insect-resistant cotton plants
The effects of two insect-resistant transgenic cotton strains (transgenic Bt pest-resistant cotton Zhongkangza 5 and Lumianyan 23, transgenic Bt+CpTI pest-resistant cotton sGK958 a...

