Leafhoppers
- Carrots,
Lettuce, and Potatoes |
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Leafhoppers are piercing and sucking insects that attack most leafy
vegetables, carrots, and potatoes. The most common leafhopper
is the aster leafhopper that transmits aster yellows disease
to carrots and lettuce. The aster leafhopper may overwinter in
grasses and small grain crop fields in northern Illinois but
majority of them migrate in late spring from the southern states.
The carrots infected with aster yellows tend to develop many
hairy roots, become stunted, and turn pale. In lettuce, yellowing
of the infected plants, stunting and twisting of the leaves characterize
it. Potato leafhopper is a mid to late season pest. The adult
and nymphs destroy the tissues where manufactured food from the
leaves is transported to other parts of the plant. The attacked
leaves turn yellow and roll. These symptoms are referred to as “Hopperburn”.
Yield loss can occur at relatively low populations and before
the symptoms are visible. Scout the crops for adults using sweep
nets and check underneath the leaf for nymphs.
Monitor aster leafhoppers by using yellow sticky traps positioned
above the crop canopy and spray insecticides recommended in your
state when 5-10 leafhoppers per field are trapped on yellow sticky
cards. Use row covers, reflective mulch, and elimination of weeds
that are alternate hosts to aster leafhopper. Potato leafhoppers
can be controlled by application of foliar and soil applied insecticides
recommended in your state. |