4.6 Article

Soybean Aphid (Hemiptera: Aphididae) Affects Soybean Spectral Reflectance

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 108, Issue 6, Pages 2655-2664

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jee/tov250

Keywords

Glycine max; Aphis glycines; remote sensing; cumulative aphid-days; reflectance

Categories

Funding

  1. Minnesota Soybean Research and Promotion Council
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq-Brazil)

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Soybean aphid, Aphis glycines Matsumura (Hemiptera: Aphididae), is the most economically important insect pest of soybean in the north central United States. Scouting-based integrated pest management (IPM) programs could become more efficient and more widely adopted by using plant spectral reflectance to estimate soybean aphid injury. Our objective was to determine whether plant spectral reflectance is affected by soybean aphid feeding. Field trials were conducted in 2013 and 2014 using caged plots. Early-, late-, and noninfested treatments were established to create a gradient of soybean aphid pressure. Whole-plant soybean aphid densities were recorded weekly. Measurements of plant spectral reflectance occurred on two sample dates per year. Simple linear regression models were used to test the effect of cumulative aphid-days (CAD) on plant spectral reflectance at 680 nm (RED) and 800 nm (NIR), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), and relative chlorophyll content. Data indicated that CAD had no effect on canopy-level RED reflectance, but CAD decreased canopy-level NIR reflectance and NDVI. Canopy- and leaf-level measurements typically indicated similar plant spectral response to increasing CAD. CAD generally had no effect on relative chlorophyll content. The present study provides the first documentation that remote sensing holds potential for detecting changes in plant spectral reflectance induced by soybean aphid. The use of plant spectral reflectance in soybean aphid management may assist future IPM programs to reduce sampling costs and prevent prophylactic insecticide sprays.

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