Recognizing bean leaf beetle injury
As mentioned in last week's newsletter, the bean leaf beetle population in Ames is larger this spring than in the past three years. Larger insect populations usually cause greater amounts of plant injury, which can be very obvious as you are scouting young soybeans. Feeding injury from bean leaf beetles is easy to recognize if you know their characteristic feeding patterns. Adult bean leaf beetles typically eat round or oval holes in cotyledons and unifoliolate leaves. They will feed initially on the expanded cotyledons, creating small pock marks in either the top or bottom side of the cotyledons. Fresh feeding (less than 12 hours old) is still green and the tissue at the feeding scar is moist. Old feeding (more than 2 days) is often brown, calloused, and dry. Rarely do they make a hole by eating completely through a cotyledon. Beetles also may feed along the edge of the cotyledon. Beetles feeding on young leaves will eat along the leaf edge, or when feeding in the "middle" of the leaf, they will create small round or oval holes. Occasionally their feeding is extensive and they will consume all of the young leaf. As long as the growing point is not killed, the plant will recover from the injury. Very few other insects feed on cotyledons and unifoliolate or first trifoliolate leaves. Exceptions are young grasshoppers, which may consume the entire cotyledon or all of the leaf except for the major leaf veins, and cutworms, which also consume large portions of the plant. If you find small round or oval holes--think bean leaf beetles. This article originally appeared on page 130 of the IC-496(12) -- May 22, 2006 issue. Updated 11/09/2006 - 10:07am
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