Bruce Potter

1.5K posts

Bruce Potter

Bruce Potter

@SWMNpest

Retired University of Minnesota IPM and professional scapegoat. Still exploring biology of agricultural and wild landscapes.

Lamberton, Minnesota & SW MN 가입일 Ekim 2012
98 팔로잉1.4K 팔로워
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Congrats to the USA hockey team on the gold medal! Heck of a game by the goalie!
English
4
0
4
227
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Temperatures here are down to -20F so far this morning. In areas with no snow cover, this might lower soil temps enough to increase western corn rootworm egg mortality. Also on the bright side-the pollen count is currently very low.
English
0
2
11
609
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Numerous calls on corn earworms in late planted corn. Insecticides have limited effectiveness inside ear husker. Moths are abundant in my garden now (did not confirm sp.). Need to do better on monitoring late migrants.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
0
2
12
567
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Hitting alfalfa too. These may be pyrethroid resistant.
English
0
0
4
143
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
A consultant in SC MN sent photos of severe fall armywom infestation in an oat cover crop. The larvae were nearly full grown. It might be worth checking any emerged fall cereals, lush grass hay ground an possibly very late-planted sweet corn.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
2
4
17
1.2K
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
The Oreus (aka minute pirate bugs) must be running out of mite and aphid prey. Sunny weather in SW MN has brought them out to do some test feeding on humans. Good bugs gone bad-happens every fall.
English
1
0
6
330
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
The zinnia patch is seeing 8 or more monarchs at a time and several painted ladies. Hummingbirds are busy at the feeders too. It takes a lot of fuel on the trip south. Soybean harvest starting and a lot of silage cut.
Bruce Potter tweet mediaBruce Potter tweet media
English
0
0
10
232
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Variable MN infestations based on planting date, rainfall, field size, and buckthorn. SWROC soybean aphid populations have developed to 100% plants infested with low # of aphids/plant. Any optimism in thos pic?.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
2
1
5
824
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Visited the SWROC western corn rootworm site this AM. Western corn rootworm pressure in continuous corn much higher here than 2024. It's early, male beetles are just beginning to emerge and no females..
Bruce Potter tweet mediaBruce Potter tweet media
English
0
4
15
668
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Looks like extended diapause rootworm problems could be more prevalent in MN corn this year.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
3
9
26
1.7K
D.J.
D.J.@dvanklomp·
@SWMNpest Have we not drowned them all with the monsoon?
English
1
0
0
195
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Soybean aphids are easy to find on V4 soybeans at UM UM SWROC near Lamberton MN. Too early to panic but may want to scout indicator fields earlier this year.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
1
2
13
1.2K
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Research update meeting at the UMN SWROC today. A new experience not presenting this year.
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
0
0
10
362
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
@TRaz13 @DarylRitchison Western corn rootworm egg mortality begins below 20F and 100% mortality occurs around 0F. Longer duration increases mortality and soil moisture can have an effect. Northerns are much more cold tolerant. Most eggs are 4-6 inches deep and will be deeper if dry.
English
0
0
1
98
Tim Ras.
Tim Ras.@TRaz13·
@SWMNpest @DarylRitchison was thinking if soil temps can get to 19 degrees and below at 12”+ it can “potentially” reduce CRW eggs. Be a huge deal for heavy and medium pressure zones for 2025.
English
2
0
1
242
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
Western corn rootworm eggs are seeing an open winter and cold soil temps. Will 2025 continue to see lower rootworm populations in SW MN?
Bruce Potter tweet media
English
3
4
21
1.9K
Bruce Potter
Bruce Potter@SWMNpest·
@BryanBiegs Most eggs are 4-6 inches deep but will tend shallower if wet and deeper if dry soil. Nor Western corn rootworm egg mortality begins below 20 F. Increases with longer exposure or colder temps. 100 % mortality near 0 F. Northern corn rootworm eggs are more cold tolerant.
English
0
0
1
68
Bryan Biegler
Bryan Biegler@BryanBiegs·
@SWMNpest How cold do soil temps need to be to kill them if that is possible?
English
2
0
1
212