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Agronomy Journal 92:726-732 (2000)
© 2000 American Society of Agronomy

ALFALFA

Alfalfa Stand Tolerance to Potato Leafhopper and Its Effect on the Economic Injury Level

Stephen A. Lefkoa, Larry P. Pedigob and Marlin E. Riceb

a Monsanto Company, 3100 Sycamore Rd., DeKalb, IL 60115 USA
b Dep. of Entomology, Iowa State University, Insectary Bldg., Ames, IA 50011-3140 USA

stephen.a.lefko{at}monsanto.com


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
In 1997, several seed companies released alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) cultivars that were marketed as resistant to potato leafhopper, Empoasca fabae (Harris), the key pest of this crop in the Midwest and northeastern USA. Our objectives were to investigate the mechanism of insect resistance and determine if potato leafhopper-resistant alfalfa cultivars would require revised pest management guidelines. Two field experiments were planted in Ames, IA. Four resistant cultivars (initial release) were compared with a susceptible cultivar planted in 1996. Another experiment was planted in 1998 to compare the same susceptible control with three other resistant cultivars (secondary release). Cages were used to create four levels of leafhopper stress, and nymphs were collected from inside cages when the alfalfa was harvested. Estimates of alfalfa dry weight were used to calculate linear yield-loss models, and model coefficients were used to calculate economic injury levels and economic thresholds. Trials were run on seedling, second-cutting seeding-year, second-cutting second-year, and second-cutting third-year alfalfa growth. There were no measurable differences in nymph production on resistant or susceptible cultivars in any trial, indicating that an antibiotic resistance mechanism was unimportant under production conditions. The potential for resistant alfalfa to outperform susceptible alfalfa under leafhopper stress began after initial seedling growth and continued through Year 3. The mechanism was described as stand tolerance, and appeared to increase as the alfalfa stand matured. The onset of stand tolerance after the initial growth interval of the seeding year raised the economic threshold from 8 to 80 leafhoppers per 10 sweeps.

Abbreviations: EIL, economic injury level • ET, economic threshold


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
ONE OF THE MOST RECENT commercial advancements in alfalfa pest management targets a key pest in the Midwest and Northeast, the potato leafhopper. In 1997, several seed companies released alfalfa cultivars that were advertised as resistant to the potato leafhopper. This ubiquitous pest is an assimilate remover that causes stunting and leaf chlorosis in alfalfa and other crops. Economic loss from potato leafhopper is best linked to reductions in alfalfa biomass and less so to forage quality (Hutchins et al., 1989).

The potential for leafhopper-resistant alfalfa was first recognized in the 1980s when Sorensen et al. (1985, 1986) and Shade and Kitch (1986) released perennial alfalfa germplasm with multiple pest resistance. Releases were referred to as glandular-haired alfalfa, although the mechanism of resistance was not fully described. This reference to glandular hairs probably was because these releases had a phenotype similar to the alfalfa described by Shade et al. (1979), who showed that hairs on an annual alfalfa secreted a sticky substance that entangled small insects.

Researchers have investigated the presence and importance of antibiosis, the negative effect of a plant on the fitness of an individual; nonpreference, the characteristic(s) of a plant that make it an undesirable host; and tolerance, the ability of a plant to avoid injury while still supporting a pest; in perennial resistant alfalfa (Painter, 1951). Most studies have emphasized the importance of pubescence in conferring resistance. Brewer et al. (1986a) compared three species of resistant (glandular-haired) alfalfa with one susceptible type. Mortality was greatest on the resistant alfalfa, compared with the control, in no-choice experiments. However, most of the clones of resistant alfalfa showed feeding and ovipositional nonpreference when a susceptible host was available. The authors did not detect an entrapment mechanism similar to the one described by Shade et al. (1979) in annual glandular-haired types. In a separate study, Brewer et al. (1986b) described how highly lignified tissues might enhance resistance to the leafhopper.

Elden and Elgin (1992) performed free-choice and no-choice experiments on alfalfa having dense pubescence and resistance to multiple pests. They concluded that some clones had high levels of feeding and ovipositional nonpreference and nymphal antibiosis. Similarly, clones that were antibiotic in no-choice tests demonstrated nonpreference when alternate hosts were available. Their conclusions on nymphal and ovipositional nonpreference should be interpreted with caution. It appears the effect of adult (female) mortality and, consequently, total oviposition were unaccounted for and could be the cause of the variation in the number of nymphs produced on each line of alfalfa.

Elden and McCaslin (1997) conducted no-choice studies and showed a significant but weak correlation between the density of glandular hairs and resistance to potato leafhopper in 19 glandular-haired alfalfa clones. Estimates of nymphal mortality ranged from 0 to 33%; however, it is unclear if nymphal mortality data were corrected using adult (female) survival, which probably influenced total oviposition. They reported 13 to 96% mortality of adult leafhoppers in no-choice cage tests. They also stated that glandular hairs on perennial clones did not entrap leafhoppers and suggested that an unexplained resistance mechanism may exist. These studies using stem cuttings have been paramount to a better understanding of the mechanism of resistance. It is difficult, however, to extrapolate their results to field conditions without great uncertainty. Using these results, producers could expect suppressed leafhopper numbers; antibiosis would be overridden by nonpreference since alternate hosts would be available (Poos and Wheeler, 1943).

Hogg et al. (1998) and Lefko (1999) conducted comparative studies of adult and nymphal population size in field plots of glandular-haired and susceptible alfalfa cultivars. This type of study could be used only to reject the presence of plot-level nonpreference or implicate, but not differentiate between, antibiosis and nonpreference. Both reports showed the adult population density was similar between resistant alfalfa and the susceptible control(s). Hogg et al. (1998) found fewer nymphs in glandular-haired alfalfa; however, Lefko (1999) did not find these differences. Both studies concluded that nonpreference is an improbable explanation for the mechanism of resistance at a production scale.

While antibiosis and nonpreference have been the focus of most studies, tolerance has received little attention (Manglitz and Sorensen, 1999). This mechanism is important because Hogg et al. (1998) and Lefko et al. (1997) showed that the population density of potato leafhopper was similar between resistant and susceptible cultivars, yet there was a yield advantage in resistant alfalfa when the leafhopper densities were high.

Our objectives were to determine if alfalfa yield response to potato leafhopper feeding differs between resistant and susceptible alfalfa, and if the potato leafhopper population growth potential differs among field plots of resistant and susceptible alfalfa. Results would help determine if tolerance is an important mechanism, and if so, how pest management guidelines could accommodate it.


    Materials and methods
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
Experiments to calculate economic injury levels (EILs) and investigate the mechanisms of resistance were conducted in the field during 1996 to 1998. One experiment was planted on 17 Apr. 1996 at Iowa State University, Johnson Research Farm, near Ames, IA (41°59' N, 93°38' W). The treatments were three commercial cultivars marketed as resistant to potato leafhopper (AmeriGuard 301, Trailblazer, and 5347LH), an experimental resistant cultivar (XAE49), and a susceptible control (645) that had historically favorable yields in Iowa (http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Publications/AG84.pdf). These three resistant commercial cultivars were initial commercial releases of potato leafhopper-resistant alfalfa. These cultivars are referred to as tolerant instead of resistant in the remainder of this article. Treatments were arranged in plots according to a randomized complete block design using four replications. Seed was planted using a single-row hand planter. Rows were spaced 19 cm apart, and the planter was calibrated to 11.3 kg/ha. Seed availability limited individual plot size to 1.5 by 3.7 m. Plots were located within a newly seeded 0.6-ha field of susceptible alfalfa.

A second experiment was initiated on 27 Apr. 1998 in a neighboring field on the same farm. Tolerant cultivars used in the experiment were 53V63, 54H69, and 3A09 (experimental line). The susceptible control again was 645. The former two tolerant cultivars were second commercial releases and probably provide better protection from potato leafhopper than earlier releases. These plots measured 1.5 by 7.4 m and were arranged according to a randomized complete block design, also using four replicates. This experiment was planted with a cultipacker-style cone planter calibrated to deliver seed at 16.9 kg/ha.

All alfalfa was harvested twice during the seeding year and three times during subsequent years. Alfalfa was harvested when it had visually reached the early to mid-bloom stage. Potato leafhoppers were caged on alfalfa to achieve different levels of pest pressure. Cages were constructed from plastic refuse containers that measured 70 cm tall by 52 cm in diameter at the open end (Fig. 1) . The opening covered a land area of 0.21 m2. The side panels and bottom were cut from the containers and 32-by-32 Lumite mesh (Synthetic Industries, Gainesville, GA) was attached in their place. Containers were reinforced on the inside with wooden lath and secured to the ground using tent stakes.



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Fig. 1 An example of potato leafhopper cage arrangement in one alfalfa plot

 
Trials were initiated by treating freshly cut or seedling alfalfa with 0.08 kg a.i./ha permethrin [(3-phenoxyphenyl)methyl (±) cis-trans 3-(2,2-dichloroethenyl)-2,2-dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate] insecticide to kill the existing insect population. Cages were placed over alfalfa that was uniform in plant density immediately after the treatment. Cages were infested with adult leafhoppers after the alfalfa had reached a height of 7 to 10 cm. Leafhoppers were caged at four densities within each plot, and densities were randomly assigned to cages before each trial. Leafhopper densities were increased after the seeding year (Table 1) . The increases were necessary to produce a greater alfalfa yield-loss response as the plants aged. Leafhoppers were reared in greenhouse colonies on broad bean (Vicia faba L.), using a 16-h photoperiod and a day:night temperature regime of 25:18°C. These colonies were reinfested with field-collected adults each summer. The percentage of adult females in the populations varied from 56 to 70% among trials.


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Table 1 Yield loss rates (slope) ± SE, x-intercepts, and nymph index of population growth ± SE for susceptible and tolerant alfalfa cultivars subjected to different leafhopper densities

 
Economic injury level trials were performed on four separate occasions. Three trials were conducted on first commercial releases and one on second commercial releases. The year, growth interval, and infestation levels used in each trial are summarized in Table 1. Each trial was terminated by collecting the plant material and nymphs from each cage. Nymphs were collected by cutting the alfalfa inside the cage, and then submerging and agitating the alfalfa in a 7:3 ethanol:water solution for 30 s. Afterward, nymphs were filtered from the ethanol and counted, and the alfalfa was bagged and dried at 60°C for 72 h. Dry matter of alfalfa from each cage was weighed immediately after the drying period.

Nymph counts per cage were converted to an index of population growth to normalize values across all leafhopper densities. The conversion equation was

where x0 equals the mean number of nymphs from replications with the zero level of infestation, ni equals the number of adults infested, and nf equals the number of nymphs collected within a cage at harvest. Subtracting x0 accounted for nymphs or eggs that were not killed by the insecticide. Values of the index >1 indicate a nymph density larger than the initial density of adults. Of the 16 cages per treatment, only 12 were used in the analysis since the four cages not infested were used to estimate x0 for each treatment. Analysis of variance (SAS Inst., 1990) was used to determine if the average index value was different among cultivars for each trial.

Alfalfa dry weight and leafhopper density data were used to calculate yield-loss equations for each cultivar in each trial. Estimates of percentage loss were calculated for infested cages using the zero level of infestation in each plot as a basis. Least squares linear regression (SAS Inst., 1990) was used to calculate linear model coefficients. Linear models were fitted to average percentage loss values for each level of infestation according to treatment. Models were recalculated and forced through the origin if the original y-intercept was positive. This procedure was used to maintain biological meaning at the expense of statistical significance (r2), since a positive y-intercept indicates yield loss from the potato leafhopper when its number is zero. Differences between slopes and intercepts were tested in each trial using a Student's t-test performed on all pairwise combinations of alfalfa (Zar, 1984). The same procedure was used to test differences among slopes for 645, the susceptible control, among trials.

Economic injury levels were calculated using the equation

where C is the cost of treatment per ha; V is the value of alfalfa per Mg; Yp is potential alfalfa yield in Mg per ha per cutting; a is the y-intercept of the yield-loss equation, a linear regression of percentage loss on insect number per unit area; b is the slope of the same yield-loss equation, and K is the proportion of reduction in potential injury or damage. This equation is modeled after equations described by Pedigo (1999). Economic parameters were $20 per hectare cost of treatment, crop value equal to $77 per Mg, and the proportion of reduction in potential injury = 1. These parameters were held constant for all calculations of EIL. The expected alfalfa yield used in all equations was 3.73 Mg/ha per cutting. Absolute densities calculated from this EIL equation were converted for use with a relative sampling technique. DeGooyer et al. (1998) published regression equations for converting the absolute estimate per 0.25 m2 to an estimate found using 10 sweeps with a sweepnet (y = 1.27x + 5.07; r2 = 0.82). The economic threshold (ET) was calculated as 75% of the EIL.


    Results
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
Index of Population Growth
There was no evidence that tolerant (glandular-haired) alfalfa had a negative effect on leafhopper population growth when caged on small plots of alfalfa. Most index values were greater than 1.0, which indicated more nymphs were collected than adults infested (Table 1). Values ranged from 0.14 ± 0.04 to 3.61 ± 0.27 for tolerant alfalfa, and from 0.22 ± 0.60 to 3.71 ± 0.51 for the susceptible control. The largest difference between average index values in one trial was between 645 and 53V63 in 1998 (Table 1, seeding year, first cutting), and although the index for 53V63 was larger compared with that of 645, the difference was not significant. This difference is probably a result of experimental error and not biologically important.

Index values <1 probably resulted from poor leafhopper control in cages before the trial, which resulted in nymph populations in uninfested cages. The average number of nymphs collected from uninfested controls, including tolerant and susceptible alfalfa, were from 5.3 to 9.0 nymphs per cage. High numbers would decrease the numerator in the conversion equation and result in smaller index values.

Yield-Loss Coefficients
Comparisons of linear model coefficients were made for all pairwise combinations of cultivars. Also, coefficients were compared among years for both alfalfa types. The slope of each model equals the percentage of yield loss per 0.21 m2 expected for each additional potato leafhopper. This coefficient is referred to as the loss rate throughout this paper. The loss rate is one variable used to calculate the EIL, and lower values result in higher ETs. Another important coefficient is the intercept of the linear model. The x-axis intercept is the pest number when loss begins.

There was a trend for lower loss rates and positive x-axis intercepts in tolerant alfalfa compared with the susceptible control; however, these differences were only detected in regrowth intervals after the initial growth of seedling alfalfa. Additionally, there was a trend for loss rates of all alfalfa to decrease as stands aged. Results in the following paragraphs are reported beginning with the trial performed on the youngest alfalfa and ending with the trial on the oldest alfalfa.

The trial performed on the initial (seedling) growth of tolerant alfalfa showed no trend for smaller loss rates in tolerant cultivars compared with the susceptible control (Table 1). The only statistical difference between loss rates was found between 53V63 and 645 (t = 2.83; df = 4; P = 0.05) and between 53V63 and 54H69 (t = 3.14; df = 4; P = 0.05). These differences are unimportant because large experimental error caused a negative, and probably meaningless, loss rate for 53V63. Both the control and 3A09 had positive x-intercepts; however, there was no statistical difference between these values.

The onset of resistance was first detected in the next trial that used the second cutting of a seeding-year stand. All loss rates for tolerant cultivars were less than the control in this trial (Table 1). The loss rates of AmeriGuard 301 (t = 5.49, df = 4, P = 0.05) and 5347LH (t = 5.61, df = 4, P = 0.05) were significantly lower than the control. Therefore, these tolerant cultivars had a significant yield advantage over the control at this age and within this range of pest pressure. Of the tolerant cultivars, Trailblazer had the highest loss rate (0.158); however, this loss rate was not significantly different from all other tolerant cultivars. Conversely, the regression fit to Trailblazer data had the highest x-axis intercept (38.86), although it was not statistically different from the others. Even though the yield advantage of tolerant alfalfa was detected at this plant age, the mechanism of resistance was not obvious because tolerant alfalfa had no measurable effect on nymphal production.

Levels of leafhopper infestation were doubled for tolerant alfalfa compared with susceptible alfalfa in the trial using the second cutting of second-year alfalfa (Table 1). This adjustment was necessary because of the relatively low loss rates in the previous trial. Surprisingly, the yield response was less evident in this trial than in the previous trial. Statistically, there were no differences in loss rates among cultivars. The loss rate of the control remained much higher. It was more than four times larger than the lowest loss rate of tolerant cultivars, even though twice as many leafhoppers were caged on tolerant cultivars. Only 5347LH had a positive x-axis intercept. Even though a yield advantage persisted in leafhopper-tolerant alfalfa, a negative effect on leafhopper population growth was absent (Table 1).

Levels of infestation were increased again in the next trial using second-cutting third-year alfalfa. The control infestation levels were 0, 40, 80, and 120 leafhoppers per 0.21 m2, and tolerant alfalfa had levels twice as high: 0, 80, 160, and 240 leafhoppers per 0.21 m2. Although the leafhopper number was twice as high in tolerant cages, there were no differences among loss rates for all cultivars. Again, this lack of difference suggests that tolerant cultivars outperformed the susceptible control by tolerating twice as many potato leafhoppers.

Another trend that emerged from this series of experiments was for loss rates to decrease (become more tolerant) with alfalfa age. This was especially obvious in the control (Table 2) . The loss rates for the control were 0.334 ± 0.224 and 0.613 ± 0.032, respectively, for the first and second cuttings of the seeding year. These values decreased to 0.095 ± 0.099 during the second year, and decreased again to 0.024 ± 0.068 during the third year. Pairwise t-tests of all combinations showed the seeding-year, second-cutting loss rate (0.613 ± 0.032) was significantly higher than loss rates from all other age classes. A conservative interpretation of these results is that the potential for alfalfa loss from potato leafhopper is probably different between the seeding year and years after.


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Table 2 Loss rates (slopes) ± SE for susceptible and tolerant alfalfa over alfalfa age classes. Seeding-year first-cutting results are based on secondary releases of potato leafhopper-tolerant cultivars; others used cultivars from the initial potato leafhopper-tolerant releases

 
A similar trend for decreasing loss rates with plant age was detected in tolerant alfalfa. Similar pairwise t-tests were performed on tolerant alfalfa across age classes. Data for tolerant alfalfa were pooled by trial and linear regression models were fitted. The experimental alfalfa was excluded from this analysis because it will not be commercialized. There were no statistical differences in the loss rates of tolerant alfalfa among years. However, the ability to tolerate the potato leafhopper increased greatly after the first cutting of the seeding year, and a trend for greater tolerance of the pest occurred in Years 2 and 3 (Table 2).


    Discussion
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
These results do not support antibiosis as the primary resistance mechanism reported by Brewer et al. (1986a), Elden and Elgin (1992), and Elden and McCaslin (1997) in perennial glandular-haired alfalfa. The present study builds on earlier findings by combining aspects of free-choice and no-choice experimental designs and approximating field conditions. The cages forced leafhoppers to survive on a fraction (>80 plants per cage determined at seeding) of the alfalfa plant population. Although earlier studies demonstrated that antibiosis functioned at an individual plant level, these results show it does not function when leafhoppers are caged on a heterogeneous population of tolerant alfalfa. Alone, these findings cannot be used to determine the category or specific mechanism of resistance nor to predict the effect of resistance on the leafhopper population. The cages prevented insects from emigrating, and the free-choice studies, mentioned earlier, showed leafhopper nonpreference.

Painter (1951) described how the role of the plant was more important than the role of the insect when tolerance was the resistance mechanism. In this study, tolerance is the best explanation of the resistance mechanism. However, the important factor is the insect's response to the genetic variability in an alfalfa stand. Combining results from the present study with the feeding and sampling studies described earlier, stand tolerance is the best explanation of the resistance mechanism.

A mechanism that appeared antibiotic using no-choice tests and single stems may appear as nonpreference when susceptible hosts are available. Brewer et al. (1986a) and Elden and Elgin (1992) confirmed this. An alfalfa stand presents leafhoppers with a diverse array of feeding and oviposition locations because of its autotetraploid genetic characteristic (McCoy and Bingham, 1988). Therefore, while antibiosis and nonpreference may function among individual plants in a field, the fraction of suitable hosts in a tolerant stand may be great enough that the stand's carrying capacity remains unchanged. Hogg et al. (1998) and Lefko (1999) confirmed this in field studies.

Tolerance may best describe how these new cultivars respond to feeding from the potato leafhopper. Moreover, tolerance may function at the individual plant level, as Painter (1951) described it, or at the field level. Below are explanations of how tolerance may function at each level.

First, plant-level tolerance, or resistance to hopperburn (Jarvis and Kehr, 1966; Kindler et al., 1973), may exist in the alfalfa population, and its efficacy is likely variable among individual plants in a stand. One explanation is related to insect behavior. Hunter and Backus (1989) identified different feeding behaviors of the potato leafhopper and linked the symptoms with one feeding behavior (multiple-cell laceration and flush). It may be that the morphology of tolerant plants causes the leafhopper to change feeding behavior to one that is less damaging (Brewer et al., 1986b; Calderon and Backus, 1992). Another explanation is that tolerant plants may metabolize or be less receptive to the toxic compounds in leafhopper saliva that cause cell damage.

Field-level or stand tolerance can also be explained in at least two ways. Both explanations assume leafhopper damage is concentrated on suitable (less tolerant) plants in the alfalfa stand. First, the growth rate or form of tolerant plants may compensate for neighboring plants that are more attractive hosts and are consequently stunted by the leafhopper (Hutchins and Pedigo, 1989; Hutchins et al., 1990). Another explanation is that loss per potato leafhopper decreases as the number per plant increases. Leafhoppers remove assimilates, and enzymes deposited in vascular tissue during feeding cause damage (Ecale and Backus, 1995a, 1995b). Hower and Flinn (1986) described how the probability of feeding on previously damaged tissue increases with insect number and that loss per leafhopper nymph decreases as the nymph number per plant increases. Womack (1984) corroborated these findings in a physiological study; alfalfa photosynthesis and transpiration declined as the leafhopper number per stem increased. Therefore, the leafhopper population damage potential might be reduced if leafhoppers aggregate on a fraction of the stand.

Studies investigating the distribution of leafhopper symptoms in an alfalfa population could provide a more definitive explanation of stand tolerance. Additionally, the level of resistance (including nonpreference, antibiosis, and tolerance) will undoubtedly increase in future cultivars, and the fraction of suitable hosts in the stand will likely decline. Therefore, stand tolerance may be an artifact of the early stage of breeding for leafhopper resistance. It may be wise to predict the effect this change will have on the resistance mechanism and investigate the value of eliminating the fraction of the stand that will support a potato leafhopper population.

We propose the concept of stand tolerance in describing the reaction of the new glandular-haired alfalfa cultivars to potato leafhopper pressure. Stand tolerance implies the interplay of more than one resistance mechanism, but emphasizes the impact this tactic will have on pest management by raising the EIL.

Calculating EILs
Painter (1951) pointed out how ecologically compatible and practical host plant resistance is in pest control, and he identified tolerance as a premier mechanism. Later, Stern et al. (1959) explained how tolerance was unique from virtually every other pest management tactic, including other resistance mechanisms, because its objective was not to suppress the pest number. They theorized how tolerance would increase the EIL instead of suppressing the pest number below a tolerable level (Fig. 2) . Results from this study show that stand tolerance creates a yield advantage great enough to warrant calculating separate EILs for susceptible and tolerant cultivars. Moreover, these data show that the ability to tolerate potato leafhopper changes with alfalfa age, and the rate of change may be different between tolerant and susceptible cultivars. We propose a two-step decision process for determining the optimal ET, depending on the type and age of the alfalfa stand (Fig. 3) .



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Fig. 2 Stylized graph showing the effect of tolerance on the economic threshold (ET) compared with insecticides. GEP, general equilibrium position. Modeled after figures in Stern et al. (1959)

 


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Fig. 3 Two-tiered decision process for determining the economic threshold for potato leafhopper in alfalfa

 
The potential for loss was large and similar for both cuttings of the seeding year in the susceptible control and the first cutting in tolerant alfalfa (Table 2). Therefore, the same ET could be used for susceptible and tolerant cultivars during this time period. The yield-loss data for these time periods were pooled and a linear model was fitted to estimate the coefficients for the EIL equation (y = 0.456x - 2.702). The resulting ET is eight adult leafhoppers per 10 sweeps (Fig. 3).

The loss rate for the susceptible control decreased greatly from the first and second cutting of the seeding year to the second cutting of the third year (Table 2). This difference may warrant the use of a higher ET. An ET of 33 leafhoppers per 10 sweeps was calculated using the yield-loss coefficients for the second cutting of the second year (y = 0.095x). This value is large compared with values described by Cuperus et al. (1983) (five adults per 10 sweeps) and DeGooyer et al. (1998) (11 adults per 10 sweeps). One explanation for this is that these previous studies did not account for stand age. A conservative ET may be between 8 and 33 adult leafhoppers per 10 sweeps for alfalfa after the seeding year.

A separate ET for tolerant cultivars was calculated using pooled results from 5347LH, AmeriGuard 301, and Trailblazer during the second cutting of the second year (y = 0.046x - 0.806). This value was 80 leafhoppers per 10 sweeps, and was 10 times larger than the earlier cutting of the same year and 2.4 times larger than the susceptible control in Year 2 (Fig. 3). Inclusion of third-year data would have increased the threshold to over 1800 leafhoppers per 10 sweeps. This number is unrealistically large, probably because the relationship between loss and leafhopper number is curvilinear, not linear, at such high densities.

Leafhopper-tolerant alfalfa cultivars may impact production in many ways. Results from this study showed it has a greater yield potential than susceptible alfalfa under leafhopper stress. This could increase alfalfa yield over the life of a stand without insecticides. Moreover, a higher ET should reduce the frequency of application and quantity of insecticide used for potato leafhopper management. This is shown in Fig. 4 , which uses leafhopper density data from Lefko (1999). The ET is exceeded in tolerant alfalfa only during the first cutting of 1996. The ET is exceeded in susceptible alfalfa during both cuttings in 1996 and the second cutting and early part of the third cutting in 1997. In this figure, the threshold for susceptible alfalfa is increased from 8 to 33 after the seeding year. If it had not been raised, the susceptible alfalfa would have spent even more time under economic loss conditions. The benefit of stand tolerance through a higher ET is clear.SAS Institute 1990



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Fig. 4 Adult potato leafhopper densities in tolerant and susceptible alfalfa cultivars, and the consequences of using separate economic thresholds (ETs) for tolerant and susceptible types. Tolerant and susceptible alfalfa share the same ET during the first cutting of 1996 (seeding year), and the ETs diverge beginning with the second cutting of the same year

 

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., for funding the majority of this research and Forage Genetics and America's Alfalfa (ABI) for providing alfalfa seed and loan of equipment. The statistical guidance of Dr. Paul Hinz and the tireless effort of Michael Nagel, who built cages and refined the methodology, were paramount to this research. Anna Dierickx, Kendra Dvorak, Ryan Gesner, Rene Hoffmann, Kelli Lotz, Eng Han Low, Brad Russel, and Robert Yaklich were excellent assistants over the course of this study. Dave Starrett's help and attention to the details of alfalfa production are also greatly appreciated.


    NOTES
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 
Iowa Agric. and Home Economics Exp. Stn. paper no. J-18255.

Received for publication March 17, 1999.
    REFERENCES
 TOP
 NOTES
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 REFERENCES
 




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J. L. Hansen, J. E. Miller-Garvin, J. K. Waldron, and D. R. Viands
Comparison of Potato Leafhopper-Resistant and Susceptible Alfalfa in New York
Crop Sci., July 1, 2002; 42(4): 1155 - 1163.
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R. M. Sulc, E. van Santen, K. D. Johnson, C. C. Sheaffer, D. J. Undersander, L. W. Bledsoe, D. B. Hogg, and H. R. Willson
Glandular-Haired Cultivars Reduce Potato Leafhopper Damage in Alfalfa
Agron. J., November 1, 2001; 93(6): 1287 - 1296.
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