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GRASSHOPPER MANAGEMENT IN NEW MEXICO Train-the-Trainers Workshop presented by Alexandre Latchininsky and Scott Schell, UW Extension Entomologists Sponsored by: USDA-APHIS-PPQ Disclaimer • Trade or brand names used in this presentation are used only for the purpose of educational information. • No product endorsement is implied. Workshop Principle: Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects -- Will Rogers Or I don’t know everything and neither do you, so let’s learn from each other (a.k.a. – when I’m wrong, let me know) Workshop “Rules” It’s called a workshop on purpose Ask any question, at any time Be a constructive skeptic What animal is the primary above-ground herbivore in a grassland biome in North America? Role of Grasshoppers in a Prairie Ecosystem •Natural “mowers” stimulate plant growth •Nutrient cycling •Food for many prairie animals Biology of the Species of Concern Grasshoppers may be an important component in the diet of Sage Grouse chicks Weed Biocontrol Agents? Some Grasshoppers ARE Beneficial! Snakeweed grasshopper Cudweed grasshopper Plains Lubber Ebony Diversity ≈170 species in NM >450 species in N.A. Twostriped Rainbow PESTS! BIOLOGY & ECOLOGY Taxonomy Class: Order: Insecta Orthoptera (22,500 species; 1,015 – in N. America) Close relatives: Blattodea (Cockroaches) Mantodea (Praying Mantises) Dermaptera (Earwigs) Taxonomy Order Orthoptera Suborder Caelifera (short-horned) Grasshoppers Suborder Ensifera (long-horned) Katydids NOT Grasshoppers katydids crickets Curved ovipositor Straight ovipositor Is Mormon Cricket a grasshopper? Mormon cricket is neither a grasshopper nor a cricket… …it’s a A KATYDID! Anabrus simplex Grasshopper Taxonomy Family: Acrididae Subfamilies: - Melanoplinae (spurthroated), - Gomphocerinae (slantfaced), - Oedipodinae (bandwinged), - Romaleinae (lubbers), - Cyrtacanthacridinae (bird grasshoppers) Genera: Species: ≈70 in New Mexico ≈170 in New Mexico, >450 in Western US GRASSHOPPER PESTS IN THE WEST - economically important in 17 western states - 20-25 pest species (out of >450) - annually remove 20-22% of rangeland vegetation - estimated average loss $400 million per year - forage losses in 2000 in Texas: $190 million - require vast areas to be chemically treated (up to 20 million acres per year during outbreaks) What to Expect in 2006? Rangeland Grasshopper Hazard Map 2005 2006 Grasshopper Biology All you need to know in order to get rid of unwanted dinner guests flights final molt mating Life cycle nymphal instars 1 to 5 ~ 30-40 d egg-laying egg-pod 1st instar critical stage for GH survival (up to >90% mortality) Development • One generation per year = univoltine • Oviposition mostly in soil • 1-4 egg-pods per female • 5-40 eggs per egg-pod Grasshopper Egg-pods Twostriped grasshopper Biology & Ecology Seasonal Development Typical: - hatching in spring - nymphal and adult development in summer - overwinter as eggs Some species: - overwinter as late-instar nymphs - adults in early summer (usually, band-winged species) Development: Gradual Metamorphosis 1 2 3 4 5 Adult Nymphal instars: 5 (rarely 4) Developmental stages 1 2 3 4 Nymphal development: 26-40 days (~1 wk/instar) Clearwinged grasshopper 5 Adult Nymph or Adult? N A A N Wing Venation NYMPH No cross veins ADULT A lot of cross veins Biology & Ecology Physiology and Behavior Feeding: Herbivores (necrophily & scavenging) 50% of total consumed by adulthood Adults: feeding on flowers and seeds Feeding is “constant” in assemblage Movement: Primarily walking (1-3 m/day upwind) Flight for escape and dispersal Migration due to crowding and genetics Biology & Ecology Food Preferences & Feeding Habits Grass feeders: Slantfaced and many Bandwinged species (Aulocara, Ageneotettix, Camnula, Arphia) Forb feeders: many Spurthroated species (Melanoplus foedus, M. angustipennis, Hesperotettix viridis) Mixed feeders: many Spurthroated species (Melanoplus sanguinipes, M. bivittatus, M. differentialis). Truly polyphagous; high economic importance Mormon cricket: may feed on >400 plants but prefers forbs Comparative size Twostriped female 1.1 g 1 ¾ in 1 in Clearwinged female 0.6 g Biology & Ecology Assemblages In a habitat, grasshopper population consists of several (usually 5-20) species Often, 1-4 species occupy a predominant position accounting for >50% of total grasshopper population Clearwinged grasshopper Biology & Ecology Population Dynamics Normally: …Outbreaks!: Grasshopper dynamics are regulated by abiotic (weather) and biotic (natural enemies) factors, but if they fail… Last for 1-4 yrs, occur at irregular intervals - every 4-10 yrs Warm/dry conditions in the summer are particularly favorable for outbreaks Anthropogenic effects (overgrazing and insecticides) Weather: Direct and Indirect Effects •Slower development •More susceptible to diseases and natural enemies •Higher mortality •Less eggs produced Less damaging Weather: Direct and Indirect Effects •Faster development •Less susceptible to diseases and natural enemies •Lower mortality •More eggs produced More damaging Biology & Ecology Population Dynamics Spatial: - Outbreaks clumped in space - Association with static features (e.g., soil type) - May spread from localized “hot spots” Biology & Ecology Natural Enemies Predators Natural Enemies • Egg predators Diptera Bombyliidae Bombyliidae larvae Blister beetles Natural Enemies • Internal parasites (nematodes) Grasshopper parasitized with a mermithid nematode Nematode egg and larva Natural Enemies • Parasitoids Wasp Scelio sp., Egg parasitoid Flies (Muscidae, Tachinidae) Parasitoids of nymphs and adults Predator “saturation” Biology & Ecology Bionomics Damage: Primary concern is rangeland Movement into cropland is relevant Control: Economic Injury Level = = Damage > Treatment cost Economic Threshold = = 20, 3rd-4th instars per sq. yd Variation with timing, species, efficacy, cost, etc. Biology & Ecology Bionomics Other: Cultural (grazing, plowing, planting) Mechanical (crushing) Integrated Pest Management Future: Fewer external resources with more environmental concern, economic demands, people, need for control, and change Purpose of Management Emerging Philosophy: The purpose of grasshopper management is to keep good stewards on the land – to keep those people who live with the Land, on the Land. National Grasshopper Management Board Integrated Pest Management IPM is an approach that substitutes knowledge and information for materials and external inputs: Essential components: Monitoring Decision-making Methods & Materials The 3-Phase Approach to Grasshopper IPM Endorsed by the National Grasshopper Management Board Prevention: Range management practices (“twice over” livestock grazing) have been shown to yield habitat conditions that both: produce more forage and yield fewer grasshoppers Twice-over vs. 5-month season-long grazing: ~300 lbs/acre more herbage biomass 66 to 75% reduction in grasshopper populations BUT, If Prevention fails … Intervention: Efficient survey combined with treatment of incipient infestations or “hot-spots” has been shown to prevent the expansion of grasshopper infestations into large-scale outbreaks BUT, If Intervention fails … Suppression: The use of Reduced Agent-Area Treatments after analysis with CARMA allows rangeland grasshopper control to yield: significant economic profits with minimal environmental harm Putting the “I” in IPM Prevention survey/sampling + cultural control Intervention survey/sampling + decision support (forecasting) + hot-spot chemical control Suppression survey/sampling + decision support (economic model) + chemical control + conservation biological control Accurate and Timely Survey is Critical for Efficient Control • Grasshopper density assessment • Species composition • Developmental stages (age structure of population) • Acreage infested • Egg-bed location