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Prepared By:
Bishnu Prasad Ghimire
INTRODUCTION
 Cotton is a soft, fluffy staple fiber that grows in boll, or protective
capsule, around the seeds of cotton plants of the genes Gossypium.
 Cotton (Gossypium spp), the king of fibers, usually commercial referred as
white gold and one of the important commercial crops, plays a pivotal role
in human civilization, economic, political and social affairs of world.
 The English term cotton derives its name from Arabic word „quotn‟, Dutch
„katoem‟ and French „coton‟.
 The four cultivated species of cotton viz. Gossypium arboretum, Gossypium
herbaceum, G. hirsutum and G. barbadense belong to Malvaceace family.
 The plant is a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the
world, including the Americas, Africa, and India.
 Latin American countries have become important suppliers of the fiber to the
world market and India, Pakistan and Turkey are also the exporters.
In Nepal, textile industries also used to import raw material from neighbor
countries, but due to extensive cultivation of cotton in different districts
(Banke, Bardia, Dang) they get a satisfactory amount of lint from
Cotton Development Board.
The economic importance of cotton is based on different properties of its
products:
 It is chiefly grown for its fiber which is used for manufacturing of clothes
for mankind.
 Cotton lint: It is the most important vegetable fiber and is woven into
fabrics either alone or combined with other fibers.
 Fuzz: It is used in production of mattresses, surgical cotton, photographic
film and paper.
 Cotton seed: Depending on varieties, it contains 20-25% semi-drying
edible oil (iodine no. 102) which is used for cooking. American cotton
contains high oil.
 Cotton seed cake: Seed cakes contain 40% protein and serves as a
important concentrated feed for livestock. Not only that, cake is the good
organic matter contains 5% N, 3% P2O5 and 2% K2O.
 Cotton stem: The stem can be used as organic manure or fuel.
MAJOR INSECTS OF COTTON
A list of potential insect pests of cotton with its management is listed below:
American bollworm/Fruit borer: Helicoverpa armiger
Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera
 It is one of the important major insect of cotton crop.
Symptoms of damage
 Bolls showing regular, circular bore holes
 Larvae seen feeding on the boll by thrusting their heads alone inside and leaving
the rest of the body outside
 Presence of granular faecal pellets outside the bore hole.
 A single larva can damage 30-40 bolls.
Fig.Feeding injury Fig.Circular bore hole Fig. Larva and Adult
Identification of the insect
 Eggs - Spherical in shape and creamy white in colour, present singly
 Larva - Shows colour variation from greenish to brown.
 It has dark brown grey lines on the body with lateral white lines and also
has dark and pale bands.
 Pupa - Brown in colour, occurs in soil, leaf, pod and crop debris
 Adult
• Light pale brownish yellow stout moth.
• Forewings are olive green to pale brown in colour with a dark
brown circular spot in the centre.
• Hind wings are pale smoky white with a broad blackish outer
margin.
Egg Larva Pupa
Management
 Avoid continuous cropping of cotton both during winter and summer seasons
in the same area as well as ratooning.
 Avoid monocropping. Growing of less preferred crops like
greengram, blackgram, soyabean, castor, sorghum etc., along with the cotton
as intercrop or border crop or alternate crop to reduce the pest infestation.
 Removal and destruction of crop residues to avoid carry over of the pest to the
next season, and avoiding extended period of crop growth by continuous
irrigation.
 Optimizing the use of nitrogenous fertilizers which will not favour the
multiplication of the pest.
 Judicious water management for the crop to prevent excessive vegetative
growth and larval harbourage.
 Inundative release of egg parasitoid, Trichogramma spp., at 6.25 cc/ha at 15
days interval 3 times from 45 DAS
 Releasing predator Chrysoperla carnea @ 1, 00, 000/ha at 6th, 13th and 14th
week after sowing.
 During bolling and maturation stage, apply any one of the following
insecticides (1000 l of spray fluid/ha):
• Phosalone 35 EC 2.5 l/ha
• Quinalphos 25 EC 2.0 l/ha
• Carbaryl 50 WP2.5 kg/ha
• Pyraclofos 50 EC 1.5 l/ha
• Endosulfan 35 EC 2.5 lit/ha
• Cypermethrin 10 EC 600-800ml/ha
Management contd…
Symptoms of damage
 Rosetted flowers
 The holes of entry plugged by excreta of larvae which are feeding inside
the seed kernels.
 They cut window holes (interlocular burrowing) in the two adjoining seeds
thereby forming "double seeds"
 The attacked buds and immature bolls drop off.
 Discolored lint and burrowed seeds.
Fig.Larva Fig. Adult
Pink bollworm: Pectinophora gossypiella
Family: Gelechiidae Order: Lepidoptera
 It is a notorious pest of cotton in all cotton growing areas.
 It is a major chewing insect of cotton crop.
Identification of the insect
 Larva
• Shows colour variation young larva white and late instar almost
black, brown or green to pale or pink
• Several dark and light alternating bands running the entire length
 Adult
• Small moth.
• Forewings are brown or dull yellow olive grey with dark spots on
the forewing.
• Hind wings margins are deeply fringed.
Fig. Larva and Adult
Management
 Clean cultivation and destruction of crop residues (fallen leaves, twigs etc.)
before the onset of season.
 Plough deeply to expose the hibernating larvae / pupae.
 Avoid late sowing of the crop. Early sowing helps in early maturity facilitating
escape.
 Withholding irrigation water to avoid prolonged late boll production/
formation to reduce the build up of over-wintering population.
 Acid delinting of cotton seeds.
 Release of egg parasitoids Trichogramma chilonis or E. johnstoni.
 Spray triazophos 40 EC 2.5l/ha and Quinalphos 20% AF in alternation even
after 100 DAS.
Spotted bollworms: Earias vittella
Spiny bollworm: Earias insulana
Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera
 It is also a chewing insect pest of cotton that causes great economic loss to
cotton crops.
Symptom of damage
 Drying and drooping of terminal shoots during pre –
flowering stage
 Shedding of squares and young bolls
 Flaring up of bracts during square and young boll
formation stage
 Holes on bolls and rotting of bolls.
Fig1. Drying - terminal shoots Fig2.Bore holes and rotting Fig3.Flared square
Identification of the insect: E. vitella
 Larva - Brownish with white streaks dorsally and pale yellow ventrally, Without
finger shaped processes
 Adult
• Small buff coloured
• Forewings are pea green with a wedge shaped white band running from base
to out margin
Fig. E. Vitella - Larva Fig. E. vitella- Adult
Identification of the insect : E. insulana
 Larva
• Brown with dorsum showing a white median longitudinal streak.
• The last two thoracic segments and all the abdominal segments
have two pairs of fleshy tubercles (finger shaped processes) one
dorsal and the other lateral
 Pupa - Brown and boat shaped
 Adult - Small buff coloured. Forewings are uniformly silvery green
Fig. E. insulana-Larva Fig. E. insulana-Adult
Management
 Collect and destroy all the shed fruiting parts
 Planting trap crop of bhendi, uprooting and burning
 Don't extend the crop period.
 Set up pheromone traps
 Conserve and encourage the activity of spiders Thomisus sp., Neosiana sp.
 Spray the following insecticide
• Maturity stage: -Quinalphos 25 AF 2 lit, Phosalone 35 EC 2.5 lit/ ha
Armyworm /Tobacco Cutworm: Spodoptera litura
Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera.
 It is a major and important chewing insect pest of cotton crop.
Symptoms of damage
 Scrapping the epidermal layer, leaving the skeleton of veins of leaf
 During severe attack, only the stem and side shoots will be standing in the
field without any leaf or bolls
 Larvae feed the leaves by making small holes.
Larva Adult
Identification of the insect
 Egg - Laid in masses which appear golden brown
 Larva
• Pale greenish with dark markings.
• Gregarious in the early stages
 Adult
• Forewings – brown colour with wavy white marking
• Hindwings- white colour with a brown patch along the margin
Management
 Use of light trap
 Set up the sex pheromone trap Pherodin S.L. at 12/ha
 Growing castor along border and irrigation bunds.
 Removal and destruction of egg masses in castor and cotton crops.
 Removal and destruction of early stage larvae found in clusters
 Collection and destruction of sheded plant parts.
 Hand picking and destruction of grown up caterpillars.
 Spray any one of the following insecticides
• chlorpyriphos 20 EC 2.0 l/ha;
• dichlorvos 76 WSC 1 lit/ha;
• fenitrothion 50 EC @ 625 ml.
 Spraying Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus at 1.5 x 1012 POB per ha.
 Use of poison bait:
• Prepared with rice bran 12.5 kg, jaggery 1.25 kg, Carbaryl 50%WP
1.25 kg and water 7.5 litres.
• This bait can be spread in the fields in the evening hours so that the
caterpillars coming out of the soil feed and get killed.
Management Contd..
Cotton aphid – Aphis gossypii
Family: Aphididae Order Homoptera
 An important sucking insect of cotton crop.
Symptom of damage
 Infesting tender shoots and under surface of the leaves.
 Curling and crinkling of leaves
 Stunted growth
 Blighted appearance when infestation is severe
 Development of black sooty mould due to the excretion of honey dew
giving the plant a dark appearance.
Aphid colony Affected leaf
Identification of the insect
 Nymphs - Yellowish or greenish brown found on the undersurface of leaves.
 Adults - Greenish brown, soft bodied and small insects.
• Winged forms may be seen under crowded conditions.
Management
 Seed treatment with imidacloprid 70 WS at 7 g/kg protect the crop upto 8
weeks.
 Release predator Chysoperla carnea or coccinella sp.
 Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha)
• Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha
• Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha
• Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha
• Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha
• NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha
 Monitoring the activities of the alate adult by setting up yellow sticky traps
Thrips: Thrips tabaci
 These tiny yellow to black, selender insects are annual pest in cotton field.
 They are active in spring.
 It is a major sucking insect of cotton crop
 Family Thripidae Order Thysonaptera.
Symptom of damage
 Shriveling of leaves due to scrapping of epidermis and desapping
 Attacked terminal buds – have ragged edges
 Silvery shine on the undersurface of leaves
Identification of the insect
 Nymphs - Very minute, slender, yellowish and microscopic.
 Adult - Small, slender, yellowish to brown with fringed wings
• Silvery shine
Fig. Adult thrip
Management
 Seed treatment with Imidacloprid 70 WS @ 7 g/kg protects the crop up
to 8 weeks.
 Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha)
• Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha
• Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha
• Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha
• Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha
• NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha
Whitefly: Bemisia tabaci
Family: Aleyrodidae.
 It is important sucking insect pest of cotton crop.
Symptom of damage
 Chlorotic spots on the leaves which latter coalesce forming irregular.
yellowing of leaf tissue which extends from veins to the outer edges of
the leave.s
 Severe infestation results in premature defoliation
 Development of sooty mould .
 Shedding of buds and bolls and poor boll opening.
 It also transmits the leaf curl virus diseases of cotton.
Fig. Affected leaf
Identification of the insect
 Nymph - Greenish yellow, oval in outline,
 Pupa - Puparia oval in shape, present on the under surface of the leaves.
 Adult - Minute insects with yellow body covered with a white waxy bloom.
Nymph Pupa Adult
Management
 Growing cotton only once a year either in winter or summer season.
 Adopting crop rotation with non-preferred hosts such as sorghum, ragi,
maize etc.
 Removal and destruction of alternate weed hosts like Abutilon indicum,
Chrozophore rottlari, Solanum nigrum
 Timely sowing with recommended spacing
 Preferably wider spacing and judicious application of recommended dose
of fertilizers
 Late sowing may be avoided and the crop growth should not be extended
 Field sanitation may be given proper attention.
 Cultivation of most preferred alternate host crops like brinjal, bhendi,
sunflower may be avoided.
 Set up yellow pan traps and sticky traps @ 12/ ha
 Collection and destruction of whitefly infested leaves from the plants.
 Spray any one of the following plant products alone or in combination with the
recommended dose of insecticide (at 2 ml/l of water)
• Neem seed kernel extract 5% (50 kg), Neem oil at 5 ml/l of water
• Fish oil rosin soap @ 25 mg /lit
• Catharanthus rosea extract 5%
 Spray any one of the following in early stage (500 l of spray fluid/ha)
• Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml or Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha
 Spray any one of the following in mid and late stages (1000 l spray liquid/ha)
• Phosalone 35 EC at 2.5 l/ha
• Quinalphos 25 EC at 2.0 l/ha
• Triazophos 40 EC 2.0 l/ha
• Acephate 75 SP 1.30 kg/ha
Note: The use of synthetic pyrethroids should be discouraged in cotton to avoid the
problem of whitefly. Cypermethrin, Fenvalrate and Deltamethrin cause resurgence
of whiteflies. So avoid repeated spraying of Pyrethroids.
Management contd…
Red cotton bug: Dysdercus cingulatus
Family : Pyrrhocoridae Order : Hemiptera
Symptom of damage
 Red stained lint and rotting bolls.
 Inner boll wall with warty growth or water soaked spots
 Young bolls abort and turn dark brown
 The bacterium Nematospora gossypii enters the site of injury and stains the
fiber.
Identification of the insect
 Nymphs and Adults
Reddish bugs with white bands on the abdomen and black
markings on the wings.
Fig. Red cotton bug
Management
 Plough the field to expose the eggs.
 Spray Phosphamidon 100 EC@250 ml/ha
Dusky cotton bug: Oxycarenus hyalinipennis
Symptom of damage
Sucks the sap from developing seeds in open bolls and stains the lint black.
Seeds discolored and shrunken.
Identification of the insect
 Eggs - Cigar shaped, white eggs in clusters of 2-10 within the half opened
bolls, on the bolls, flower or buds
 Nymphs and Adults - Dusky, grayish brown bug, with pointed head and
hyaline wings
Management
Spray Phosphamidon 100 EC@250 ml/ha
Fig. Dusky cotton bug
Mealy bugs: Phenacoccus sp., Ferrisa sp. and Maconellicoccus sp.
Family: Peudococcidae Order: Hemiptera
 They are considered pests as they feed on plant juices and act as vector of
various diseases.
Symptom of damage
 Heavy clustering of mealy bugs usually seen under surface of leaves as a thick mat
with waxy secretion.
 Excrete copious amount of honey dew on which the fungus sooty mould grow.
 Affected plants appear sick and black, resulting reduced fruiting capacity.
Management
 Spray application of any following insecticides viz.
• Carbaryl 50 WP @ 1kg/acre,
• Thiodicarb75 WP @ 250 g/acre
• Profenophos 50 EC @ 500 ml/acre
• Acephate 75SP @ 800 g/acre.
Cotton Stem Weevil: Pempheres (Pempherulus) affinis
Family: Curculionidae Order: Coleoptera
 It is a serious pest of cotton crop.
Symptoms of damage
 Swellings on the stem just above the ground level.
 Young plants are invariably killed
 Older plants that survive, lack vigor and strength, and when strong winds
blow, these plants sometimes break at the nodes.
Figs. Showing symptoms
Shoot weevil: Alcidodes affaber
Family: Curculionidae Order: Coleoptera.
Symptoms of damage
 Terminal shoots with galls
 Bore hole surrounded by raised margins
Identification of the insect
 Adult - Weevil dark greyish brown with pale cross bands on the elytra.
Management
 Soil application of Carbofuran 3 G @ 30 kg may be done on 20 days after
sowing and earthed up.
 Basal application of FYM 25 t/ha or 250 kg/ha of Neem cake.
Stem borer: Sphennoptera gossypii
Symptoms of damage
 Plants with drooping leaves,
 Wilting in patches
Identification of the insect
 Adult - Dark brown jewel beetle
Management
 Soil application of Carbofuran 3 G @ 30 kg may be done on 20 days after
sowing and earthed up.
 Basal application of FYM 25 t/ha or 250 kg/ha of Neem cake.
Leaf roller: Sylepta derogata
Family: Pyrsultidae Order: Lepidoptera.
 It is a important insect which cause rolling of leaves of cotton.
Symptom of damage
 Leaves rolled in the form of trumpets fastened by silken threads
 Marginal portion of leaves eaten away
 Plants defoliated in severe attack
Fig. Leaf affected by leaf roller
Identification of the insect
 Larva - Bright green (glistening) with dark head and prothoracic shield.
 Adult - Moth with yellow wings having brown wavy markings
Fig. Larva Fig. Adult
Management
 Collection and destruction of sheded plant parts.
 Hand picking and destruction of grown up caterpillars.
 Spray any one of the following insecticides :
• chlorpyriphos 20 EC 2.0 l/ha
• dichlorvos 76 WSC 1 lit/ha
• fenitrothion 50 EC @ 625 ml.
Leafhopper: Amrasca (biguttula biguttula) devastans
Family: Cicadellidae Order: Hemiptera.
Symptoms of damage
 Tender leaves become yellow.
 The margin of the leaves start curling downwards and reddening sets in.
 In the case of severe infestation, leaves get a bronze or brick red colour
which is typical “hopper burn” symptom.
 The margin of the leaves get broken and crumble into pieces when crushed.
 The leaves dried up and are shed and the growth of the crop is retarded.
Identification of the insect
Nymph - Light green, translucent, wingless found between the veins of leaves
on the under surface
Adult - Green, wedge shaped leafhopper.
Fig. Leafhopper
Management
 Seed treatment with Imidacloprid 70 WS at 7 g/kg protect the crop upto 8
weeks.
 Early sowing and closer spacing of cotton reduces pest infestation
 Where the leafhopper is a big menace, apply neem oil formulation 0.5 %
or neem oil 0.5 % thrice at fortnightly intervals
 Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha)
• Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha
• Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha
• Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha
• Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha
• NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha
SOME USEFUL INSECTS OF COTTON
 Besides harmful insects numerous beneficial insects and arthropod species
can be found in cotton fields attacking pest species.
 These beneficial species attack the egg, immature (larval; nymphal and
pupal) and stage of most insect species.
 Some of the beneficial insects are as follows:
Ants
 Ants are important and overlooked predators in cotton fields.
 Several different species may inhibit fields as the worker caste ants
(approximately 1/8 inch in length, wingless and with a narrow waist)
 Ants are an important predator of bollworm egg and larvae.
Fig. Ant
Assasian bugs and other piercing-sucking predators
 Several different species of Assasian bugs (yellow to black coloration) are
predators of both immature and adult stags of insects.
 It readily attacks the larval stage of Bollworm.
 Minute pirate bugs attack Thrips, aphids, mites and bollworm
(eggs, larvae). Both big-eyed bug adults and nymphs also frequently attack
thrips, plant bugs, bollworm and other insects.
 Damsel bugs also attacks spider mites and bollworms (egg, small to
medium sized larvae).
Fig. Assasian bug Fig. Big-eyed bug
Lacewings
 Two lacewing species (brown and green) occur in cotton fields, but the
green is more commonly found.
 Adult may feed on insects‟ eggs, but the larvae are more important
because they are voracious predators of aphids and bollworms (eggs,
larvae).
 A single lacewing larva can consume more than 40 bollworm egg in one
day.
Fig. Lacewings Larva Fig. Lacewings-adult
Major Insect of cotton

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Major Insect of cotton

  • 2. INTRODUCTION  Cotton is a soft, fluffy staple fiber that grows in boll, or protective capsule, around the seeds of cotton plants of the genes Gossypium.  Cotton (Gossypium spp), the king of fibers, usually commercial referred as white gold and one of the important commercial crops, plays a pivotal role in human civilization, economic, political and social affairs of world.  The English term cotton derives its name from Arabic word „quotn‟, Dutch „katoem‟ and French „coton‟.  The four cultivated species of cotton viz. Gossypium arboretum, Gossypium herbaceum, G. hirsutum and G. barbadense belong to Malvaceace family.  The plant is a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the world, including the Americas, Africa, and India.  Latin American countries have become important suppliers of the fiber to the world market and India, Pakistan and Turkey are also the exporters.
  • 3. In Nepal, textile industries also used to import raw material from neighbor countries, but due to extensive cultivation of cotton in different districts (Banke, Bardia, Dang) they get a satisfactory amount of lint from Cotton Development Board. The economic importance of cotton is based on different properties of its products:  It is chiefly grown for its fiber which is used for manufacturing of clothes for mankind.  Cotton lint: It is the most important vegetable fiber and is woven into fabrics either alone or combined with other fibers.  Fuzz: It is used in production of mattresses, surgical cotton, photographic film and paper.  Cotton seed: Depending on varieties, it contains 20-25% semi-drying edible oil (iodine no. 102) which is used for cooking. American cotton contains high oil.  Cotton seed cake: Seed cakes contain 40% protein and serves as a important concentrated feed for livestock. Not only that, cake is the good organic matter contains 5% N, 3% P2O5 and 2% K2O.  Cotton stem: The stem can be used as organic manure or fuel.
  • 4. MAJOR INSECTS OF COTTON A list of potential insect pests of cotton with its management is listed below: American bollworm/Fruit borer: Helicoverpa armiger Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera  It is one of the important major insect of cotton crop. Symptoms of damage  Bolls showing regular, circular bore holes  Larvae seen feeding on the boll by thrusting their heads alone inside and leaving the rest of the body outside  Presence of granular faecal pellets outside the bore hole.  A single larva can damage 30-40 bolls. Fig.Feeding injury Fig.Circular bore hole Fig. Larva and Adult
  • 5. Identification of the insect  Eggs - Spherical in shape and creamy white in colour, present singly  Larva - Shows colour variation from greenish to brown.  It has dark brown grey lines on the body with lateral white lines and also has dark and pale bands.  Pupa - Brown in colour, occurs in soil, leaf, pod and crop debris  Adult • Light pale brownish yellow stout moth. • Forewings are olive green to pale brown in colour with a dark brown circular spot in the centre. • Hind wings are pale smoky white with a broad blackish outer margin. Egg Larva Pupa
  • 6. Management  Avoid continuous cropping of cotton both during winter and summer seasons in the same area as well as ratooning.  Avoid monocropping. Growing of less preferred crops like greengram, blackgram, soyabean, castor, sorghum etc., along with the cotton as intercrop or border crop or alternate crop to reduce the pest infestation.  Removal and destruction of crop residues to avoid carry over of the pest to the next season, and avoiding extended period of crop growth by continuous irrigation.  Optimizing the use of nitrogenous fertilizers which will not favour the multiplication of the pest.  Judicious water management for the crop to prevent excessive vegetative growth and larval harbourage.  Inundative release of egg parasitoid, Trichogramma spp., at 6.25 cc/ha at 15 days interval 3 times from 45 DAS  Releasing predator Chrysoperla carnea @ 1, 00, 000/ha at 6th, 13th and 14th week after sowing.
  • 7.  During bolling and maturation stage, apply any one of the following insecticides (1000 l of spray fluid/ha): • Phosalone 35 EC 2.5 l/ha • Quinalphos 25 EC 2.0 l/ha • Carbaryl 50 WP2.5 kg/ha • Pyraclofos 50 EC 1.5 l/ha • Endosulfan 35 EC 2.5 lit/ha • Cypermethrin 10 EC 600-800ml/ha Management contd…
  • 8. Symptoms of damage  Rosetted flowers  The holes of entry plugged by excreta of larvae which are feeding inside the seed kernels.  They cut window holes (interlocular burrowing) in the two adjoining seeds thereby forming "double seeds"  The attacked buds and immature bolls drop off.  Discolored lint and burrowed seeds. Fig.Larva Fig. Adult Pink bollworm: Pectinophora gossypiella Family: Gelechiidae Order: Lepidoptera  It is a notorious pest of cotton in all cotton growing areas.  It is a major chewing insect of cotton crop.
  • 9. Identification of the insect  Larva • Shows colour variation young larva white and late instar almost black, brown or green to pale or pink • Several dark and light alternating bands running the entire length  Adult • Small moth. • Forewings are brown or dull yellow olive grey with dark spots on the forewing. • Hind wings margins are deeply fringed. Fig. Larva and Adult
  • 10. Management  Clean cultivation and destruction of crop residues (fallen leaves, twigs etc.) before the onset of season.  Plough deeply to expose the hibernating larvae / pupae.  Avoid late sowing of the crop. Early sowing helps in early maturity facilitating escape.  Withholding irrigation water to avoid prolonged late boll production/ formation to reduce the build up of over-wintering population.  Acid delinting of cotton seeds.  Release of egg parasitoids Trichogramma chilonis or E. johnstoni.  Spray triazophos 40 EC 2.5l/ha and Quinalphos 20% AF in alternation even after 100 DAS.
  • 11. Spotted bollworms: Earias vittella Spiny bollworm: Earias insulana Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera  It is also a chewing insect pest of cotton that causes great economic loss to cotton crops. Symptom of damage  Drying and drooping of terminal shoots during pre – flowering stage  Shedding of squares and young bolls  Flaring up of bracts during square and young boll formation stage  Holes on bolls and rotting of bolls. Fig1. Drying - terminal shoots Fig2.Bore holes and rotting Fig3.Flared square
  • 12. Identification of the insect: E. vitella  Larva - Brownish with white streaks dorsally and pale yellow ventrally, Without finger shaped processes  Adult • Small buff coloured • Forewings are pea green with a wedge shaped white band running from base to out margin Fig. E. Vitella - Larva Fig. E. vitella- Adult
  • 13. Identification of the insect : E. insulana  Larva • Brown with dorsum showing a white median longitudinal streak. • The last two thoracic segments and all the abdominal segments have two pairs of fleshy tubercles (finger shaped processes) one dorsal and the other lateral  Pupa - Brown and boat shaped  Adult - Small buff coloured. Forewings are uniformly silvery green Fig. E. insulana-Larva Fig. E. insulana-Adult
  • 14. Management  Collect and destroy all the shed fruiting parts  Planting trap crop of bhendi, uprooting and burning  Don't extend the crop period.  Set up pheromone traps  Conserve and encourage the activity of spiders Thomisus sp., Neosiana sp.  Spray the following insecticide • Maturity stage: -Quinalphos 25 AF 2 lit, Phosalone 35 EC 2.5 lit/ ha
  • 15. Armyworm /Tobacco Cutworm: Spodoptera litura Family: Noctuidae Order: Lepidoptera.  It is a major and important chewing insect pest of cotton crop. Symptoms of damage  Scrapping the epidermal layer, leaving the skeleton of veins of leaf  During severe attack, only the stem and side shoots will be standing in the field without any leaf or bolls  Larvae feed the leaves by making small holes. Larva Adult
  • 16. Identification of the insect  Egg - Laid in masses which appear golden brown  Larva • Pale greenish with dark markings. • Gregarious in the early stages  Adult • Forewings – brown colour with wavy white marking • Hindwings- white colour with a brown patch along the margin Management  Use of light trap  Set up the sex pheromone trap Pherodin S.L. at 12/ha  Growing castor along border and irrigation bunds.  Removal and destruction of egg masses in castor and cotton crops.  Removal and destruction of early stage larvae found in clusters  Collection and destruction of sheded plant parts.  Hand picking and destruction of grown up caterpillars.  Spray any one of the following insecticides • chlorpyriphos 20 EC 2.0 l/ha; • dichlorvos 76 WSC 1 lit/ha; • fenitrothion 50 EC @ 625 ml.
  • 17.  Spraying Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus at 1.5 x 1012 POB per ha.  Use of poison bait: • Prepared with rice bran 12.5 kg, jaggery 1.25 kg, Carbaryl 50%WP 1.25 kg and water 7.5 litres. • This bait can be spread in the fields in the evening hours so that the caterpillars coming out of the soil feed and get killed. Management Contd..
  • 18. Cotton aphid – Aphis gossypii Family: Aphididae Order Homoptera  An important sucking insect of cotton crop. Symptom of damage  Infesting tender shoots and under surface of the leaves.  Curling and crinkling of leaves  Stunted growth  Blighted appearance when infestation is severe  Development of black sooty mould due to the excretion of honey dew giving the plant a dark appearance. Aphid colony Affected leaf
  • 19. Identification of the insect  Nymphs - Yellowish or greenish brown found on the undersurface of leaves.  Adults - Greenish brown, soft bodied and small insects. • Winged forms may be seen under crowded conditions. Management  Seed treatment with imidacloprid 70 WS at 7 g/kg protect the crop upto 8 weeks.  Release predator Chysoperla carnea or coccinella sp.  Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha) • Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha • Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha • Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha • Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha • NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha  Monitoring the activities of the alate adult by setting up yellow sticky traps
  • 20. Thrips: Thrips tabaci  These tiny yellow to black, selender insects are annual pest in cotton field.  They are active in spring.  It is a major sucking insect of cotton crop  Family Thripidae Order Thysonaptera. Symptom of damage  Shriveling of leaves due to scrapping of epidermis and desapping  Attacked terminal buds – have ragged edges  Silvery shine on the undersurface of leaves Identification of the insect  Nymphs - Very minute, slender, yellowish and microscopic.  Adult - Small, slender, yellowish to brown with fringed wings • Silvery shine Fig. Adult thrip
  • 21. Management  Seed treatment with Imidacloprid 70 WS @ 7 g/kg protects the crop up to 8 weeks.  Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha) • Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha • Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha • Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha • Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha • NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha
  • 22. Whitefly: Bemisia tabaci Family: Aleyrodidae.  It is important sucking insect pest of cotton crop. Symptom of damage  Chlorotic spots on the leaves which latter coalesce forming irregular. yellowing of leaf tissue which extends from veins to the outer edges of the leave.s  Severe infestation results in premature defoliation  Development of sooty mould .  Shedding of buds and bolls and poor boll opening.  It also transmits the leaf curl virus diseases of cotton. Fig. Affected leaf
  • 23. Identification of the insect  Nymph - Greenish yellow, oval in outline,  Pupa - Puparia oval in shape, present on the under surface of the leaves.  Adult - Minute insects with yellow body covered with a white waxy bloom. Nymph Pupa Adult
  • 24. Management  Growing cotton only once a year either in winter or summer season.  Adopting crop rotation with non-preferred hosts such as sorghum, ragi, maize etc.  Removal and destruction of alternate weed hosts like Abutilon indicum, Chrozophore rottlari, Solanum nigrum  Timely sowing with recommended spacing  Preferably wider spacing and judicious application of recommended dose of fertilizers  Late sowing may be avoided and the crop growth should not be extended  Field sanitation may be given proper attention.  Cultivation of most preferred alternate host crops like brinjal, bhendi, sunflower may be avoided.  Set up yellow pan traps and sticky traps @ 12/ ha
  • 25.  Collection and destruction of whitefly infested leaves from the plants.  Spray any one of the following plant products alone or in combination with the recommended dose of insecticide (at 2 ml/l of water) • Neem seed kernel extract 5% (50 kg), Neem oil at 5 ml/l of water • Fish oil rosin soap @ 25 mg /lit • Catharanthus rosea extract 5%  Spray any one of the following in early stage (500 l of spray fluid/ha) • Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml or Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha  Spray any one of the following in mid and late stages (1000 l spray liquid/ha) • Phosalone 35 EC at 2.5 l/ha • Quinalphos 25 EC at 2.0 l/ha • Triazophos 40 EC 2.0 l/ha • Acephate 75 SP 1.30 kg/ha Note: The use of synthetic pyrethroids should be discouraged in cotton to avoid the problem of whitefly. Cypermethrin, Fenvalrate and Deltamethrin cause resurgence of whiteflies. So avoid repeated spraying of Pyrethroids. Management contd…
  • 26. Red cotton bug: Dysdercus cingulatus Family : Pyrrhocoridae Order : Hemiptera Symptom of damage  Red stained lint and rotting bolls.  Inner boll wall with warty growth or water soaked spots  Young bolls abort and turn dark brown  The bacterium Nematospora gossypii enters the site of injury and stains the fiber. Identification of the insect  Nymphs and Adults Reddish bugs with white bands on the abdomen and black markings on the wings. Fig. Red cotton bug
  • 27. Management  Plough the field to expose the eggs.  Spray Phosphamidon 100 EC@250 ml/ha
  • 28. Dusky cotton bug: Oxycarenus hyalinipennis Symptom of damage Sucks the sap from developing seeds in open bolls and stains the lint black. Seeds discolored and shrunken. Identification of the insect  Eggs - Cigar shaped, white eggs in clusters of 2-10 within the half opened bolls, on the bolls, flower or buds  Nymphs and Adults - Dusky, grayish brown bug, with pointed head and hyaline wings Management Spray Phosphamidon 100 EC@250 ml/ha Fig. Dusky cotton bug
  • 29. Mealy bugs: Phenacoccus sp., Ferrisa sp. and Maconellicoccus sp. Family: Peudococcidae Order: Hemiptera  They are considered pests as they feed on plant juices and act as vector of various diseases. Symptom of damage  Heavy clustering of mealy bugs usually seen under surface of leaves as a thick mat with waxy secretion.  Excrete copious amount of honey dew on which the fungus sooty mould grow.  Affected plants appear sick and black, resulting reduced fruiting capacity. Management  Spray application of any following insecticides viz. • Carbaryl 50 WP @ 1kg/acre, • Thiodicarb75 WP @ 250 g/acre • Profenophos 50 EC @ 500 ml/acre • Acephate 75SP @ 800 g/acre.
  • 30. Cotton Stem Weevil: Pempheres (Pempherulus) affinis Family: Curculionidae Order: Coleoptera  It is a serious pest of cotton crop. Symptoms of damage  Swellings on the stem just above the ground level.  Young plants are invariably killed  Older plants that survive, lack vigor and strength, and when strong winds blow, these plants sometimes break at the nodes. Figs. Showing symptoms
  • 31. Shoot weevil: Alcidodes affaber Family: Curculionidae Order: Coleoptera. Symptoms of damage  Terminal shoots with galls  Bore hole surrounded by raised margins Identification of the insect  Adult - Weevil dark greyish brown with pale cross bands on the elytra. Management  Soil application of Carbofuran 3 G @ 30 kg may be done on 20 days after sowing and earthed up.  Basal application of FYM 25 t/ha or 250 kg/ha of Neem cake.
  • 32. Stem borer: Sphennoptera gossypii Symptoms of damage  Plants with drooping leaves,  Wilting in patches Identification of the insect  Adult - Dark brown jewel beetle Management  Soil application of Carbofuran 3 G @ 30 kg may be done on 20 days after sowing and earthed up.  Basal application of FYM 25 t/ha or 250 kg/ha of Neem cake.
  • 33. Leaf roller: Sylepta derogata Family: Pyrsultidae Order: Lepidoptera.  It is a important insect which cause rolling of leaves of cotton. Symptom of damage  Leaves rolled in the form of trumpets fastened by silken threads  Marginal portion of leaves eaten away  Plants defoliated in severe attack Fig. Leaf affected by leaf roller
  • 34. Identification of the insect  Larva - Bright green (glistening) with dark head and prothoracic shield.  Adult - Moth with yellow wings having brown wavy markings Fig. Larva Fig. Adult Management  Collection and destruction of sheded plant parts.  Hand picking and destruction of grown up caterpillars.  Spray any one of the following insecticides : • chlorpyriphos 20 EC 2.0 l/ha • dichlorvos 76 WSC 1 lit/ha • fenitrothion 50 EC @ 625 ml.
  • 35. Leafhopper: Amrasca (biguttula biguttula) devastans Family: Cicadellidae Order: Hemiptera. Symptoms of damage  Tender leaves become yellow.  The margin of the leaves start curling downwards and reddening sets in.  In the case of severe infestation, leaves get a bronze or brick red colour which is typical “hopper burn” symptom.  The margin of the leaves get broken and crumble into pieces when crushed.  The leaves dried up and are shed and the growth of the crop is retarded. Identification of the insect Nymph - Light green, translucent, wingless found between the veins of leaves on the under surface Adult - Green, wedge shaped leafhopper. Fig. Leafhopper
  • 36. Management  Seed treatment with Imidacloprid 70 WS at 7 g/kg protect the crop upto 8 weeks.  Early sowing and closer spacing of cotton reduces pest infestation  Where the leafhopper is a big menace, apply neem oil formulation 0.5 % or neem oil 0.5 % thrice at fortnightly intervals  Spray any one of the following insecticides (500 l spray fluid/ha) • Imidacloprid 200 SL at 100 ml/ha • Methyl demeton 25 EC 500 ml/ha • Dimethoate 30 EC 500 ml/ha • Phosphamidon 40 SL 600 ml/ha • NSKE 5% 25 kg/ha
  • 37. SOME USEFUL INSECTS OF COTTON  Besides harmful insects numerous beneficial insects and arthropod species can be found in cotton fields attacking pest species.  These beneficial species attack the egg, immature (larval; nymphal and pupal) and stage of most insect species.  Some of the beneficial insects are as follows: Ants  Ants are important and overlooked predators in cotton fields.  Several different species may inhibit fields as the worker caste ants (approximately 1/8 inch in length, wingless and with a narrow waist)  Ants are an important predator of bollworm egg and larvae. Fig. Ant
  • 38. Assasian bugs and other piercing-sucking predators  Several different species of Assasian bugs (yellow to black coloration) are predators of both immature and adult stags of insects.  It readily attacks the larval stage of Bollworm.  Minute pirate bugs attack Thrips, aphids, mites and bollworm (eggs, larvae). Both big-eyed bug adults and nymphs also frequently attack thrips, plant bugs, bollworm and other insects.  Damsel bugs also attacks spider mites and bollworms (egg, small to medium sized larvae). Fig. Assasian bug Fig. Big-eyed bug
  • 39. Lacewings  Two lacewing species (brown and green) occur in cotton fields, but the green is more commonly found.  Adult may feed on insects‟ eggs, but the larvae are more important because they are voracious predators of aphids and bollworms (eggs, larvae).  A single lacewing larva can consume more than 40 bollworm egg in one day. Fig. Lacewings Larva Fig. Lacewings-adult