Farm Progress

Planting Tips For Hessian Fly Management

October 2, 2009

2 Min Read

For nearly seven decades, Kansas wheat producers have been advised of the Hessian fly-free date, a calendar date (usually about Oct. 10-15) which, by planting afterward, was theoretically intended to prevent problems with Hessian Fly infestations in wheat. But as it turns out, the Hessian fly-free date may not be as ironclad as experts once believed, says Jeff Whitworth, Kansas State University Extension entomologist.

He says planting wheat after the fly-free date is a good management tool for wheat pests, but research conducted in 2008 shows that Hessian flies often persist well after the fly-free date. There is much to be learned about Hessian fly, which has become a more prevalent problem in recent years, he says. A generation ago, popular wheat varieties contained resistance to the insect. As Hessian fly problems waned, however, the emphasis on breeding resistance into varieties faded, too.

Whitworth and his colleague, Holly Davis, are in the midst of a multiple-year research grant from the Kansas Wheat Commission, in which they hoping to learn much more about Hessian fly, including control methods, wheat treatments and other best management practices.

One component of the research is a collaboration with USDA's Agricultural Research Service to find new varieties and cultivars that have resistance to Hessian fly. Hessian fly is a gnat-like insect that feeds on nearly every wheat field in Kansas (and many fields in other states) in the fall, and often causes yield losses up to 50% or more. Whitworth says Hessian fly is becoming more pervasive in areas of Kansas in which it has seldom been a problem.

"In 2009, we had problems in far western Kansas, actually totaling some fields, which we'd never had before,” says Whitworth. “We had infestations in south-central and north-central Kansas, too.” He adds that evolving tillage practices “exacerbate the Hessian fly problem. As we go to more no-till or reduced-till, there is more volunteer wheat throughout the state.

“Growers do a good job for the most part at controlling volunteer, but sometimes there are extenuating circumstances, such as too much rainfall, that prevent volunteer control. This represents an ideal green bridge in the summer," he says.

Because the use of insecticides is fruitless, few producers are willing to destroy wheat fields heavily infested with the insect, says Whitworth. Thus, there are only two options to control Hessian fly: the aforementioned fly-free date or using seed-applied insecticide treatments prior to planting. Both of these have their limitations – the fly-free date because of the insects' persistence into late fall, and the seed treatments because they work only up to three to four weeks after planting, he says.

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