South East Farm Press Logo

The take home point is we really only have a few modes of action and ‘go to’ products for control of immature plant bugs.

Scott Stewart

June 11, 2018

1 Min Read

As often happens, there is a flurry of activity in early planted cotton. Plant bugs often stack up there first until other cotton starts squaring. I’ve also had reports of more clouded plant bugs in some areas than we’ve been seeing recently.

Pretty much every year I start the season by suggesting the use of Centric and full-labeled rates of imidacloprid prior to squaring. I’m sticking to the plan for the first spray or two, but once we reach the third week of squaring, I suggest some changes.

It has become clear that the neonicotinoids (Centric and imidacloprid) are not providing good control once we start seeing many nymphs in the field. Nymphs often start showing up in meaningful numbers during the third week of bloom.

Thus, I suggest a couple of options once a field gets closer to bloom ... 1) tank mix 4-6 oz of Diamond with either Centric of imidacloprid, or 2) use Transform at 1.5 oz/acre. 

A third option could be Vydate. Some will elect to use Acephate/Orthene, but in my opinion we need to save that bullet for later in the season.

The take home point is we really only have a few modes of action and ‘go to’ products for control of immature plant bugs, namely Transform, Diamond, and OP insecticides (really just Acephate or Bidrin).

Do your best to mix, match, and rotate these insecticides during bloom.

For more information of sampling, treatment thresholds, and insecticide options.

About the Author(s)

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like