4.6 Article

Evaluation of Two-Leaf Sampling Units to Estimate Sugarcane Aphid (Hemiptera: Aphididae) Economic Thresholds in Commercial Grain Sorghum

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 114, Issue 1, Pages 481-485

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jee/toaa270

Keywords

Melanaphis sacchari; binomial sampling; sequential sampling; canopy distribution; sample-unit

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture's Crop Protection and Pest Management Applied Research and Development Program [2015-7006-24259, 1007751]
  2. Extension Implementation Program [2017-700627282, 1014126]

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The study evaluated different 2-leaf sampling units and found that two randomly selected leaves from the middle stratum were more accurate in estimating sugarcane aphid density. Some sampling units showed high variability in estimating aphid density across different growth stages, while the (L1+U1) sampling unit demonstrated good accuracy in assessing variation in aphid density.
Sugarcane aphid Melanaphis sacchari Zehntner is a significant economic pest of grain sorghum in the United States. Effective monitoring and early detection are cornerstones for managing invasive pests. The recently developed binomial sequential sampling plan estimates sugarcane aphid economic thresholds (ETs) based on classification whether a 2-leaf sample unit has <= or >= 50 M. sacchari. In this study, we evaluated eight 2-leaf sampling units for potential use in the sequential sampling plan. From 2016 through 2017, whole plant counts of M. sacchari were recorded non-destructively in situ on sorghum plants from 140 fields located in five states. Plant canopies were stratified into three categories. Two leaves from each stratum were used to compare linear relationships between M. sacchari numbers per two-leaf sample unit and total M. sacchari density per plant. Analysis revealed that two randomly selected leaves from the middle stratum accounted more variation for estimating M. sacchari density when compared to two leaves from the other strata. Comparison of eight two-leaf sampling units within plant growth stages were variable in quantifying variation of M. sacchari densities. When growth stages were combined, the standard uppermost + lowermost leaf sample unit and a unit consisting of two randomly selected leaves from the middle stratum revealed little difference in their enumeration of variation in M. sacchari density. Because other sample units were either less predictive and/or more variable in estimating M. sacchari density, we suggest that the (L1+U1) sample unit remain the preferred method for appraising M. sacchari ETs.

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