Abstract

Nezara viridula (L.), Euschistus servus (Say), and Chinavia hilaris (Say) (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) are economic pests of cotton in the southeastern USA. Because adult stink bugs exhibit edge-mediated dispersal at crop-to-crop interfaces as they colonize cotton, strategic placement of physical barriers at these interfaces could manage these pests. The objective of this study was to determine the effectiveness of a physical barrier, either synthetic or plant-based, at the peanut-to-cotton interface for suppressing stink bugs that would move to cotton. In 2012 and 2013, sorghum sudangrass (2.4 and 2.1 m high, respectively) was significantly taller than cotton (1.4 and 1.3 m high, respectively) which was taller than peanut (0.4 and 0.5 m high, respectively). Buckwheat (0.6 m high), planted only in 2012, was significantly taller than peanut, but shorter than cotton. For both years of the study, sorghum sudangrass and a 1.8-m-high polypropylene barrier wall effectively deterred dispersal of stink bugs into cotton. Because each of these barriers was taller than cotton, their success in protecting cotton likely was due to disruption of the flight of stink bugs from low-growing peanut into cotton. The shortest barrier wall (0.6-m-high) did not suppress stink bug dispersal into cotton probably because it was approximately the same height as peanut. In 2012, flowering buckwheat increased the efficacy of Trichopoda pennipes (F.) attacking N. viridula in cotton although it did not deter dispersal of stink bugs. In conclusion, a barrier at least as tall as cotton can effectively retard the entry of stink bug adults into cotton.

Highlights

  • The southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula (L.), the brown stink bug, Euschistus servus (Say), and the green stink bug, Chinavia hilaris (Say) (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae), are economic pests of cotton (Barbour et al 1990; Turnipseed et al 1995; Bundy and McPherson 2000)

  • For cotton row 1, stink bug density was significantly different between all barrier treatments; density was lowest for the sorghum sudangrass barrier and highest for the buckwheat treatment relative to all other treatments

  • For cotton row 2, stink bug density was significantly higher for the buckwheat and control treatments compared to the 1.8-m barrier wall and sorghum sudangrass treatments

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Summary

Introduction

The southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula (L.), the brown stink bug, Euschistus servus (Say), and the green stink bug, Chinavia hilaris (Say) (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae), are economic pests of cotton (Barbour et al 1990; Turnipseed et al 1995; Bundy and McPherson 2000). In the coastal plain of the southeastern USA, cotton is a mid-to-late-season host crop for these stink bug species (Bundy and McPherson 2000). Adult stink bugs colonize cotton to feed on fruit and oviposit on foliage (Tillman 2013). In the coastal plain of the southeastern USA, peanut and cotton are two crops common to farmscapes (i.e., multiple fields of different crops whose edges interface with each other and non-crop habitats). Raster maps of interpolated stink bug populations, spatial analysis by distance indices (SADIE) methodology (Perry et al 1999), and mark-recapture

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