The response of potato, Solanum tuberosum L., tuber yield to stem injury by European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner), larvae was investigated in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States for 3 yr. This response was described for 'Superior', 'Atlantic', and 'Snowden' potato, which are early-season, midseason, and late-season maturing cultivars, respectively. To model the yield/injury relationship, a range of corn borer injury levels was established in the field by augmenting the natural infestation with varying densities of laboratory-reared larvae. Linear and nonlinear regression analyses (plateau and second-order polynomial models) were used to describe the relationship between yield of U.S. No. 1 grade tubers and the percentage of stems injured by corn borer larvae. The maturity of the cultivar did not affect the response of potato yield to stem injury. In nine of 14 experiments, potato tolerated high levels of corn borer injury (55-90% of stems injured) without yield loss, suggesting that control of corn borer may not be necessary. Yet, in one of five Superior tests, in two of four Atlantic tests and in two of five Snowden tests, corn borer injury significantly reduced yield. Of the five data sets in which corn borer injury reduced yield, the plateau model fit two data sets and the quadratic model fit one data set. In two of the three cases, these models accounted for nearly identical amounts of total variation in yield as that accounted for by the linear model. The linear model fit four of the five data sets, but the R2 values were low for three of the four tests (0.10, 0.18, and 0.31). The parameter or parameters that interact with corn borer injury to cause tuber yield reduction should be identified before economic injury levels and thresholds are developed.
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