My library button
Book cover of Controlling the Clover-flower Midge in the Pacific Northwest

Controlling the Clover-flower Midge in the Pacific Northwest

by Albert Hansen, Alfred Glaze Smith, C. W. Creel, David Ernest Lantz, Edmund Burke McCormick, Edward Owen Guerrant Kelly, F. H. Branch, Frank Webster Farley, George James Burt, George Milton Warren, Harry B. McClure, Harry Baker Humphrey, Henry Milton Conolly, Homer Columbus Thompson, James French Wilson, James Herbert Beattie, John June Davis, John Raymond Horton, John William Roberts, Lewis B. Flohr, Madge Janet Reese, Marion Dorset, Philip Luginbill, William Walter Yothers ยท 1918

ISBN:  Unavailable

Category: Unavailable

Page count: 14

"Of all corn pests in the South one of the most serious is the larva, or young of the 12-spotted cucumber beetle -- the so-called southern corn rootworm. True to its name, it feeds on the roots, but in young corn it also drills a small hole in the stem just above the first circle of roots, boring out the crown and killing the bud. Attacked plants either die outright or are so badly stunted as to be unproductive. Lowland corn suffers the most and injury is greatest during cool, damp seasons. The adult, or beetle, is also exceedingly destructive; not, however, to corn, but to cucumber, squash and a great variety of other truck crops and ornamental plants. Progressive farming methods, as described in this bulletin, will reduce the ravages of this insect. Burn over waste places to destroy dead grass, weeds, and rubbish in which the beetles winter, If possible, avoid planting corn in fields which contained corn the year before. Enrich soil by planting legumes so that the corn will have a better chance of recovering from rootworm injury. Protect the bobwhite. This bird destroys many beetles of the rootworm. By careful observations, extending over a period of years, find out the dates between which the rootworm does the most damage; then time your planting so that it will fall either before or after these dates, taking into consideration, of course, other important factors in crop production." -- p. [2]