Abstract
ABSTRACT Beet leafhoppers (Circulifer tenellus Baker) have been identified as the vector for a plant-pathenogenic phytoplasma known as beet leafhopper-transmitted virescence agent. Beet leaf-hopper-transmitted virescence agent causes purple top disease in potatoes, which can reduce yields and tuber quality. A trapping network, composed of ≈100 sites, monitors leafhoppers in the Columbia Basin of Oregon and Washington through a collaborative effort of regional researchers and stakeholders. Yellow sticky cards were used to determine the timing and spatial distribution of beet leafhoppers in the Columbia Basin; insects were counted weekly from early April through late October in 2006, 2007, and 2008. Weather data collected from a network of weather stations in Oregon and Washington were used in a nonparametric multiplicative regression analysis to determine which abiotic environmental variables might influence beet leafhopper populations. Weather conditions (mean temperature, dew point, precipitation, and wi...
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