Sm. Spangler et Dd. Calvin, Influence of sweet corn growth stages on European corn borer (Lepidoptera : Crambidae) oviposition, ENV ENTOMOL, 29(6), 2000, pp. 1226-1235
Oviposition rates of the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis (Hubner),
were examined on corn plants from the S-leaf through postharvest growth sta
ges during 1994-1996. Per-plant rates in the field during vegetative stages
showed a gradual increase as new leaves appeared, and a sharp increase whe
n reproductive plant parts emerged. Laboratory studies indicated a similar
relationship between oviposition rate and plant growth stage: significantly
greater rates occurred on reproductive plants. Laboratory experiments show
ed that when only 4-leaf to early green tassel (preanthesis) plants were pr
esent (simulating conditions during early-season European corn borer activi
ty), per-plant oviposition was significantly greater on the oldest (11-leaf
to green tassel) plants. When the oviposition rate was based on leaf area
rather than on a per-plant basis, however, statistical differences between
vegetative stages were lost. When European corn borer females were given on
ly reproductive plant stages (simulating conditions during late-season Euro
pean corn borer oviposition), plants in the green tassel, anthesis, green s
ilk, and brown silk stages had generally equal oviposition rates, and these
were significantly greater than on postharvest plants. This European corn
borer oviposition simulation, when based on leaf area, showed the same patt
ern as the per-plant oviposition. Thus, leaf area appears to influence ovip
osition during the vegetative stages, when leaf area is rapidly expanding,
but is of little influence after tassels emerge and leaf area is expanding
at a slower rate or declining. Moth alighting in the laboratory indicate a
behavioral difference between sexes. Females alighted on plants identical t
o those favored for oviposition. In contrast, males showed no preference fo
r any growth stage of corn.