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Distribution of aphids in cereal crops
Author(s) -
DEAN G. J.,
LUURING B. B.
Publication year - 1970
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1970.tb04628.x
Subject(s) - biology , rhopalosiphum padi , crop , agronomy , sitobion avenae , pest analysis , transect , horticulture , homoptera , aphididae , ecology
SUMMARY Cereal crops were examined weekly for aphids during 1969. Plants in twenty samples of row 0.3 m long were examined in a sheltered perimeter of a crop and along a transect 36.6 m into the crop. Aphids were usually first found within 1–4 weeks of the first alatae caught in a suction trap operating 12.2 m above ground. When first alatae caught in a suction trap operating 12.2 m above ground. When the first found from 10 to 27% of the 0.3 m lengths sampled contained aphids. Rhopalosiphum padi , first found late in May, were scarce (< 0.53/0.3 m) throughout June and July. Sitobium spp. and Metapolophium dirhodum , which appeared in mid‐June, were more numerous than R. padi ; most occurred during the second half of July, and populations decreased just before harvest in early August. Sitobium avenae was more abundant (max. 19.3/sample) than either S. fragariae (0.91) or M. dirhodum (2.51). More aphids occurred in oats (max. 52/0.3 m) during July than in wheat (45), and barley had fewer (6.8). S. avanae was more abundant than M. dirhodum in sheltered areas of barley and wheat, and in exposed areas of the same crop M. dirhodum was commonest. Along sheltered perimeters, the ratio of S. avenae to M. dirhodum was largest in barley (11:1), intermediate in oats (6:1) and smallest in wheat (3.7:1). Sitobium spp. were most numerous on the ears, when most M. dirhodum were on the leaves. Regression analyses of log. S 2 on log. m suggested that S. avenae was more evenly distributed within (36.6 m) the field (b = 1.056 + 0.109) than along the sheltered perimeter (b = 1.432 + 0.132), though it seemed similarly distributed along perimeters of barley, oats and wheat. The distributions of M. dirhodum and Sitobium spp. along sheltered perimeters of all crops were apparently similar.

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