The incidence of the corn leafhopper decreases in crops in Argentina and Uruguay

Published 2024년 10월 25일

Tridge summary

The National Network of Monitoring Traps in Argentina has reported a decrease in the population of the corn leafhopper (Dalbulus maidis) in most of the sites studied in Argentina and Uruguay, as per the results of its sixth survey. The adult leafhoppers captured in adhesive chromatic traps in 429 locations in Argentina and 19 in Uruguay showed a significant reduction, with some areas experiencing over 90% decrease. However, the network cautions the need for continued monitoring and control measures, including the elimination of volunteer corn and vector control, due to the potential risk of survival and multiplication of adult leafhoppers and the possibility of volunteer corn acting as a source of food for them. The network also emphasized the importance of precise taxonomic identification of the leafhopper species to avoid overestimation.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The National Network of Monitoring Traps in Argentina for the corn leafhopper (Dalbulus maidis), the small insect that transmits the crop stunting disease that caused huge production losses last season, announced the results of its sixth survey --carried out in that country but also in Uruguay-- and there is good news: the pest population has again decreased in most of the sites studied. In this case, the adult leafhoppers captured between October 4 and 21 in adhesive chromatic traps in 429 locations in Argentina were counted, distributed in the northwest, northeast, the Litoral region, the central north and the central south. In addition, 19 locations in Uruguay were incorporated. The Clarín newspaper report indicates that in all regions, the localities that recorded D. maidis capture were represented by the lowest category (1 to 4 D. maidis adults per trap), except for the NOA, which had a slight increase in localities corresponding to the category with 5 to 20 D. maidis adults ...
Source: Eltelegrafo

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