Cotton Flashcards
Background information on Cotton
300 million ha of cotton (2% of total cropped land)
IPM largely developed in cotton agroecosystems because of over reliance on chemicals
How much insecticides per year are used on cotton and why?
25% of global insecticide use applied to cotton
- high value cash crop
- attacked by pest complexes
- not consumed
- grown in areas favourable for pest species
Describe the biology of the cotton plant
Small trees/shrubs in genus Gossypium
Plant family Malvaceae (includes okra/hibiscus)
Immature flower buds (squares) blossom and become boils that have long (1-6cm) white seed hairs (lint)
Lint is spun for cotton, stalk residues are ploughed or destroyed, boll husks used to feed cattle and oil from seed is processed for industrial use
Where did cotton originate, when and which current countries is it found?
Found in both old and new world from 5,000bc
Largely a tropical or sub-tropical crop that requires a lot of sunshine and water
Leading production areas comprise India, Pakistan, China, Brazil, USA, Egypt, Uzebkistan and Turkey
Describe the growth of the cotton plant
Plant Establishment - From planting to appearance of first flower but (~50 days in ideal conditions)
Fruit Formation and Maturation - From appearance of first square through to first boil opening (~30 days)
Boll Formation and Maturation - Starts about 80 days (about 25 days for maturation under ideal conditions)
Describe cotton yields worldwide
Average is 1.6 tonnes/ha
Varies by about 10 fold globally (0.5t/ha in many African countries to 5t/ha in Israel)
China (worlds largest producer) averages 2.8t/ha > 5 million ha
What is the extent of cotton yield losses? What factors are important in this
Attacked by a range of pest species (>1,300 recorded)
Potential losses to pests are calculates >30% but actual losses are ca. 10-15%
Weeds also have the potential to cause yield loss, especially early on
Pathogens are occasionally important
Above are controlled with chemicals
What are the key pests of cotton?
Pink Bollworm (Pectinophora gossypiella) - Primary Lepidopterous pest Cotton Boll Weevil (Anthonomous grandis) - Primary Coleopterous pest Lygus Bugs (Lygus hesperus) - Hemipterous
What methods of pest management are used in cotton?
Host plant resistance
Biological control
Cultural control
Biorational compounds (pheromones, microbes etc)
How is host plant resistance used?
Pilosity - resistance to weevils, bollworms, various bugs
Pigmentation - Red pigmentation affects bollworms, hemipterous pests
Transgenic crops - Expression of Bt endotoxin
Short-season crops (pest avoidance)
Which biological controls are used?
Parasitoids e.g. Trichogramma
Aphid predators e.g. ladybirds
Whitefly predators e.g. lacewings
How are cultural techniques used?
Crop rotations Host-plant resistance Planting density Planting dates Phytosanitation Boll weevils overwinter in broad leaved litter so avoid these areas
How are biorationale techniques used?
Pheromones - especially for mating disruption of Lepidopterous pests Nucleopolyhedrosis viruses (Lepidoptera) Bt sprays (Lepidoptera and Coleoptera)
Case study Peru
Canete Valley, Peru: 22,000 ha cultivated land planted with cotton in 1920s
After WW2 extensive DDT, BHC, and Toxaphene used as blanket sprays
1949-1954: yields increased by 50%
1955: resistance in aphids to BHC, bollworm resistance to DDT, whitefly outbreaks begin, more boll weevils
1955-1960: Spraying increases to every 3 days, production system becomes uneconomic
1960s onwards: Perennial planting banned, Trichogramma insectaries established, switch to nicotine sulfate sprays, organochlorides no longer used
1965 onwards: Yields begin to increase, number of applications declines substantially to ~2 per crop
Case study China
1950-1970s: excessive use of organochlorides and organophosphates
Mid 1970s onwards: IPM because of resurgence, resistance, environmental contamination etc.
Many IPM programmes focused on the use of biological control agents and more recently on Bt crops
1997: introduction of Bt crops
2010: 69% of cotton grown in China was Bt cotton
Income for farmers doubled due to yield increases and 60% reduction in insecticide applications