Real Farmer Autumn 2022

Page 73

FARM SUPPLIES

Take no chances with grass grub this autumn “You’re dealing with a pest that lives underground and is far from predictable in terms of timing.” Grass grub larvae can be present in the soil from autumn through to the end of winter, meaning it is almost impossible to predict timing or length of feeding. Short term protection products are unable to cover the whole risk period except via a programme of multiple applications. Grass grub damage costs NZ more than people often realise, Christie says. A recent study led by AgResearch estimated irrigated Canterbury dairy farmers lost $1.8 million a year in dry matter yield, highlighting potentially significant economic gains from better pest control. AgResearch scientist Dr Sue Zydenbos presented the work at the Grasslands conference in Napier late 2019. It modelled data and pasture measurements over three years to quantify the scale and cost of the yield gap between pastures affected by grass grub, and those which were not. The yield gap was calculated at 6,800 kg DM/ha, modelled at an annual profit loss of $650/ha. “Those are big numbers,” she says. “If you’re aiming to grow 20 t DM/ha/year on irrigated land in Canterbury, losing 6,800 kg DM/ha/year would be a third of your total DM production.”

Grass grub larvae may be small, but as many farmers found in autumn 2021, they’re capable of causing major problems. Even at relatively low numbers, they can make a meal of new grass paddocks in the weeks ahead, not to mention autumn sown cereals, and clover seed crops.

newly sown pasture and protects cereals and clover seed crops for the life of the crop. A tiny green polymer granule which is drilled down the spout with the seed at sowing time, it is the only controlled release formulation of its type for grass grubs. suSCon Green is impregnated with chlorpyrifos which is control-released into the surrounding soil.

For best results, suSCon Green should be drilled at 15 kg/ha in the same furrow with the seed at 15cm row spacings. It’s critical to have sufficient granules per metre along the seed row. Drilling into sprayed out pasture or bare ground is also key, because it forces grass grub to move into the drill row to feed, and thus ingest the chlorpyrifos released by suSCon Green granules. suSCon Green is not suitable for broadcast or roller drilling methods of sowing.

The released chlorpyrifos degrades in the soil but is constantly replenished from the granule for the duration of its active life.

Seed and granules should not be sown in different rows, nor should seed and granules, or granules alone, be under sown into unsprayed pasture.

The economic threshold for control of grass grub in newly sown pasture is as little as three larvae per spade square, or 75 per square metre, so it doesn’t take many to create an issue.

That means reduced environmental impact, a less hazardous formulation, low toxicity to earthworms and a granule that is free flowing, dust-free and very easy to handle.

For more advice on protecting new pasture, cereal, and clover seed plantings from grass grub with suSCon Green, talk to your Ruralco Representative today.

Seed treatment will protect newly germinated seedlings over the establishment period. But after that, what are your options?

Cynthia Christie, technical specialist for Nufarm, says grass grub may be one of New Zealand’s most common and costly pasture pests, but that doesn’t make them easy to control.

®suSCon is a registered trademark of Nufarm Technologies USA Pty Ltd

Significant losses were reported this time last season, because by the time farmers realized what was happening it was too late to save their paddocks.

Controlled release suSCon® Green from Nufarm gives up to three years’ control of

Zydenbos et al, Journal of New Zealand Grasslands 81: 163-170 (2019) 1

THIS PROMOTIONAL FEATURE WAS PROVIDED BY NUFARM R E A L FA RME R

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Articles inside

Plan for Covid like you would the Irrigation Season

2min
pages 69-72

Take no chances with grass grub this autumn

3min
pages 73-74

Doing it the right way

3min
pages 63-65

Arable Ys staying true to its initial goals

5min
pages 66-68

Beware of fires on farm

1min
page 62

The year’s realities already bite

3min
pages 59-60

It’s a bread marketer’s dream

4min
pages 56-58

Autumn in style

10min
pages 42-48

Smart ideas to reduce working hours on dairy farms

3min
pages 49-50

Fifty years of training rural workers

3min
pages 51-52

Legumes under the spotlight for Hill

4min
pages 53-55

The Farmer’s Law Firm

3min
page 41

Full circle with Andrew Barlass

10min
pages 10-14

Timing is everything

3min
pages 33-34

The special power of oats

2min
pages 37-40

Recognition for hard mahi

3min
pages 15-17

Methane mitigation tech not science fiction

8min
pages 30-32

Family in tune with bees’ needs

7min
pages 18-20

Brits foil bid to protect Manuka

4min
pages 21-24

New EV charging station to be launched at Ruralco

3min
pages 25-26
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