In each of 3 study years ( 1978 , 1979 , 1980 ), stub cotton, Gossypium spp., fruiting in commercial fields began approximately 4 to 6 weeks earlier than fruiting in planted cotton. The numbers of male pink bollworm, Pectinophora gossypiella (Saunders), moths caught early in the growing season in gossyplure-baited Delta traps were significantly higher in stub cotton than in planted cotton. Pink bollworm larval infestations in squares and bolls and Heliothis spp. oviposition occurred 4 to 6 weeks earlier in stub cotton than in planted cotton.Under controlled experimental conditions, approximately 2.6 times more moths from overwintered pink bollworm larvae emerged in stub cotton than in planted cotton. About 62 percent of the moths emerging in stub cotton, compared with 10 percent of the moths emerging in planted cotton, had host material (squares) available for reproduction as a result of the earlier growth of the stub cotton.Boll infestations in the stub cotton were first found during the week ending June 21, and economic infestation levels of 15 percent or more were reached by the week ending July 26.In contrast, economic level boll infestations occurred in adjacent planted cotton during the week ending August 16 and in distant (265 m) planted cotton during the week ending August 30.Infestations of boll weevil, Anthonomus grandis Boheman, were found in squares and/or bolls, or adults were caught in grandlurebaited traps in stub cottonfields on three ranches in western Maricopa County in 1978, the first year of the stub cotton study.The wet, cold winter of 1978 to 1979 limited stub cotton production during 1979, and no boll weevils were found during the 1979 growing season. When approximately 24,000 ha of stub cotton were grown in 1980 and 1981, boll weevils were found in squares, bolls, and/or caught in traps in stub cottonfields on 6 ranches in the Cosmos area and 1 ranch near Gila Bend during 1980, and on 1 ranch in Rainbow Valley, 2 ranches near Buckeye, 1 ranch in Harquahala Valley, 12 ranches in the Cosmos area, 3 ranches near Gila Bend, 3 ranches in the Hyder area, and 3 ranches near Aztec in 1981 in stub and planted cotton. Lygus spp.; whitemarked fleahopper, Spanagonicus albofasciatus (Reuter); cotton fleahopper, Pseudatomoscel is seriatus (Reuter); and cotton leafperf orator , Bucculatrix thurberiella Busck, populations during the 3 years of the study were not of economic significance in either stub or planted cotton.Beneficial predaceous insects were high in both stub and planted cotton production systems early in the season and declined thereafter.iii Insecticide applications were applied earlier to stub cotton than planted cotton but averaged only about one additional application to stub cotton vs. planted cotton and controlled pink bollworm and Heliothis spp. effectively in both cotton cultural systems.
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