Abstract:Abstract-Protecting stored grain from insect damage, with minimum pesticide risk, will require pest management based on comprehensive understanding of storage environments and their interactions with pest populations. Computer modeling offers the means to this understanding. To obtain data sets for modeling selected pests of stored maize, we studied maize storages on six farms in a four-county area of southwestern South Carolina. Grain moisture content was measured monthly, and grain temperatures were recorded… Show more
“…After harvest, maize and commodities produced from maize are frequently hosts to a great variety of insect and fungal pests that cause severe economic damage [1][2][3][4][5][6] . Although Bt formulations have been evaluated extensively for controlling insect pests of stored grain, commercially acceptable levels of protection against coleopteran (beetle) pests have not been achieved [7][8][9][10] .…”
“…After harvest, maize and commodities produced from maize are frequently hosts to a great variety of insect and fungal pests that cause severe economic damage [1][2][3][4][5][6] . Although Bt formulations have been evaluated extensively for controlling insect pests of stored grain, commercially acceptable levels of protection against coleopteran (beetle) pests have not been achieved [7][8][9][10] .…”
“…Hagstrum (1989) observed that numbers of adult C. ferrugineus beetles decrease with depth in the grain bulk of newly harvested wheat over the first 2 months of storage. The observation of Arbogast and Throne (1997) does not suggest this pattern. This contradiction might be explained by the preference for warmer and wetter grain locations and the effect of sliding.…”
“…The nature of the grain storage habitat on South Carolina farms and the diversity of insect populations that occur there were described by Horton (1982) and by Arbogast and Throne (1997). The present paper reports an extension of these studies, which examined temporal variation in abundance of P. interpunctella and C. cautella infesting stored maize.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…Both species occur frequently in farm-stored maize in South Carolina, but Plodia occurs more frequently than Cadra and is usually more abundant (Arbogast and Throne, 1997).…”
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