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Annual Corn Rootworm “Digs” Have Begun
Agronomy | July 28, 2006

This past week, we (University of Illinois) began our root digs at the Orr Research and Demonstration Center, located near Perry, as well as in Urbana.

The experiment near Perry represents an expansion westward of our Insect Management and Insecticide Evaluation program, managed by Ron Estes, Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois. As the variant western corn rootworm extends its range throughout much of the state, we want to make sure that we challenge this insect pest with the latest root-protection tools in sites that are as locally relevant to producers as possible. It seems certain that this evaluation program will become more established in southern Illinois as the variant western corn rootworm pushes in this direction. After we finish our root evaluations in Urbana this week, we will concentrate our efforts in DeKalb and Monmouth for the week beginning July 24.

Based on the lack of corn rootworm larvae that are floating to the surface in our root-soaking tanks, we believe the root-feeding period is over for much of central Illinois. By next week, maximum root injury will likely have occurred across northern Illinois as well. So far, the level of root injury has been very severe in our Urbana experiments. This intense pressure is anticipated because of our use the preceding year of a trap crop system (late-planted corn grown with pumpkins). However, even in our first-year corn plots (soybeans in 2005), the level of root damage has been extreme this season

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