WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — Kansas wheat farmers convened last week to discuss crop progress amid challenging weather conditions. The Kansas Wheat Commission and the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers met ...
The EPA has approved a label expansion for FMC’s Elevest insect control, extending its use across key specialty crops and adding a new application method for row crops. The updated label now allows ...
Bolove-Nolopi (VR) Oct 20, GNA – A devastating outbreak of armyworm has struck Abolove-Nolopi community, in the Keta Municipality of the Volta Region. It has destroyed over 50 acres of farm crops, ...
As recent harvests and scouting reports may indicate, armyworms and fall armyworms seem to become a more serious problem for Kansas farmers each year. For those who may have experienced problems with ...
Controlling volunteer wheat this summer and now into early fall has been challenging. While we are always thankful for the needed moisture, it has caused several flushes of volunteer wheat now. And I ...
Fall can bring an increase in insect encounters in the landscape and home. Most are nuisance insects only, and many are beneficial insects. One that may cause damage to lawns is fall armyworms, which ...
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - A pesky species of caterpillar have returned once again, with the goal of eating landscape. Armyworms are known to consume grass blades, hayfields, and pastures. They get ...
When western South Dakota cattleman Rusty Lytle, Lytle Red Angus, first noticed something unusual in one of his rented pastures this summer, he knew he needed answers fast. “In this pasture west of ...
A north central Kansas farmer says an unusually early invasion of fall armyworms could threaten his alfalfa crop. Shale Porter tells Brownfield he’s seen the pest about six weeks earlier than normal. ...
It looks like the fall armyworms are back and already making their way across Mississippi. In mid-July, reports of activity had surfaced in Grenada and Panola Counties—an early signal for producers ...
TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) - An invasive and destructive worm has made its way back to northeast Kansas. Typically, armyworms hang out further south but recent weather could’ve attracted them to the area.