TY - JOUR
T1 - Fate of eggs of first-generation Ostrinia nubilalis (Lepidoptera
T2 - Pyralidae) in three conservation tillage systems
AU - Andow, D. A.
PY - 1992/1/1
Y1 - 1992/1/1
N2 - Percentage hatch, chewing predation, Chrysopa sp. predation, other sucking predation, and parasitism by Trichogramma sp. of egg masses of first-generation European corn borer were estimated in spring chisel plow, ridge tillage, and no-tillage maize Zea mays in SE Minnesota. Tillage plots were split with and without terbufos application and with and without Bacillus thuringiensis-permethrin application in all combinations. Egg masses from laboratory reared O. nubilalis were exposed to natural enemies in the field eight times during the oviposition period of first-generation O. nubilalis, and population densities of Coleomegilla maculata were estimated. Parasitism was 0.6% and predation was low during 1986. During 1987, chewing predation was highest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system; Chrysopa sp. predation was lowest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system; Chrysopa sp. predation was lowest in the chisel-plow system and highest in the no-tillage system. C. maculata population densities were highest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system, and chewing predation was positively related to C. maculata density. Predation by other unknown chewing predators was also higher in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system. The inverse relation between chewing and Chrysopa sp. predation was probably related to species-specific responses to the tillage environments. -Author
AB - Percentage hatch, chewing predation, Chrysopa sp. predation, other sucking predation, and parasitism by Trichogramma sp. of egg masses of first-generation European corn borer were estimated in spring chisel plow, ridge tillage, and no-tillage maize Zea mays in SE Minnesota. Tillage plots were split with and without terbufos application and with and without Bacillus thuringiensis-permethrin application in all combinations. Egg masses from laboratory reared O. nubilalis were exposed to natural enemies in the field eight times during the oviposition period of first-generation O. nubilalis, and population densities of Coleomegilla maculata were estimated. Parasitism was 0.6% and predation was low during 1986. During 1987, chewing predation was highest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system; Chrysopa sp. predation was lowest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system; Chrysopa sp. predation was lowest in the chisel-plow system and highest in the no-tillage system. C. maculata population densities were highest in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system, and chewing predation was positively related to C. maculata density. Predation by other unknown chewing predators was also higher in the chisel-plow system and lowest in the no-tillage system. The inverse relation between chewing and Chrysopa sp. predation was probably related to species-specific responses to the tillage environments. -Author
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U2 - 10.1093/ee/21.2.388
DO - 10.1093/ee/21.2.388
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0027065312
SN - 0046-225X
VL - 21
SP - 388
EP - 393
JO - Environmental Entomology
JF - Environmental Entomology
IS - 2
ER -