
Read the
magazine
story to find out more. Scientists
Close In on New Aphid Threat to SoybeansBy Jan Suszkiw May 2, 2002Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists and colleagues are getting
a better handle on the basic biology, impact and migration of a new aphid
species pestering soybean crops in Illinois and other nearby states. The aphid, identified as Aphis glycines from Asia, first came to
researchers' attention during the summer of 2000. Initially, there was
speculation it belonged to aphid species that infest cotton and melon crops,
notes Glen Hartman, a plant pathologist at ARS'
Soybean/Maize
Germplasm, Pathology, and Genetics Research Unit in Urbana, Ill. To help clear up the matter, entomologists Manya Stoetzel and David Voegtlin
examined specimens of the mystery aphid under a microscope for tiny structures
on the pest's body that can differentiate one aphid species from another.
Stoetzel works at ARS'
Systematic
Entomology Laboratory in Beltsville, Md. Voegtlin is at the
Illinois Natural History Survey in
Champaign. With the aphid's identify determined, Hartman, ARS scientists Leslie Domier
and Loyd Wax, and University of Illinoiscolleagues are closely monitoring the pest's movement, damage to soybeans, and
importance as an insect vector of soybean virus pathogens. Aphids alone are destructive pests. But their ability to infest plants with
so many different kinds of viruses makes them a twofold menace to crops. Two
viral cohorts that scientists accuse A. glycines aphids of transmitting
are the soybean mosaic virus and soybean dwarf virus. Now that the Asian aphid's presence is known, plant breeders can begin
evaluating soybean germplasm lines for resistance to the pest. A more detailed story about this new aphid appears in this
month's
issue of Agricultural Research magazine on the World Wide Web. ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's primary scientific research agency. Story contacts Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory Jan R Suszkiw U.S. Department of Agriculture |