Abstract
SUMMARYA technique was developed and deployed in central Illinois to trap and assay aphid alatae for incidence of soybean mosaic virus (SMV) transmission among naturally occurring transient aphid populations downwind of a field of infected soybean. In a 2‐yr study, 1709 alate aphids were trapped alive and assayed, 4.2% of which transmitted SMV. Five species of aphids accounted for more than 93% of the transmissions: Aphis craccivora Koch, Macrosiphum euphorbiae (Thomas), Myzus persicae (Sulzer), Rhopalosiphum maidis (Fitch), and Rhopalosiphum padi (L.). At least 55 additional species were assayed, five of which transmitted only once. Others did not transmit. Because virus infection during the early growth stages of soybean increases the loss of yield and the percentage of seed‐borne virus, vector species that tend to fly middle to late spring are, from an economic point of view, more important in the spread of SMV. R. maidis flew in mid‐ to late summer and in autumn. R. padi was not abundant at any time of year and its transmission efficiency was low. M. persicae tended to fly in mid summer. Two species (A. craccivora and M. euphorbiae) which had major flights in late spring and early summer and relatively high transmission efficiencies are potentially important in the economic spread of SMV in central Illinois. A third species, Aphis citricola Van der Goot, may also be important because it flies in late spring and laboratory data suggest it is a relatively efficient vector of SMV. A. citricola was not assayed by our technique because we trapped in the morning and this species appears to fly later in the day.
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