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Iowa State University

The European Corn Borer

Department of Entomology

  • The Insect
    • Identification
    • Life Cycle and Generational Ecotypes
    • Pheromone Types and Pheromone Trapping
    • How Corn is Damaged
  • Management
    • Scouting Techniques
    • First Generation
    • Second Generation
    • Reaching a Management Decision
    • First Generation in Whorl-Stage Corn
    • Second Generation in Tassel-Stage or Later Corn
    • Cost-Benefit
    • Timing Insecticide Treatment
    • Application Equipment
    • Resistant Varieties
    • Biological Agents
    • Transgenic Corn
    • Weather
    • Cultural Practices
  • Commodities
    • Sweet Corn
    • Popcorn
    • Seed Corn
    • Peppers
    • Snap Bean
    • Cotton
    • Wheat
    • Potato
    • Other Crops
  • Predictive Models
  • Galleries
Chemical Control

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Description: 

An insecticide was aerially applied in three different swaths to this corn field. The dark green strips highlight healthier corn plants were the European corn borer larvae were killed by the insecticide. The light brown areas in the rest of field indicate where this pest continued to feed and tunnel into the plants, thereby causing the plants to die sooner and lose yield.

Iowa State University

Department of Entomology

Copyright © 2013 Iowa State University of Science and Technology. All rights reserved.