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St. Lawrence County farmers could get a break on alfalfa anti-beetle program costs and a boost in yields

Posted 4/7/15

Farmers in St. Lawrence County who raise alfalfa can take advantage of a funding program to encourage more of them to treat fields for the highly destructive alfalfa snout beetle. The Northern New …

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St. Lawrence County farmers could get a break on alfalfa anti-beetle program costs and a boost in yields

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Farmers in St. Lawrence County who raise alfalfa can take advantage of a funding program to encourage more of them to treat fields for the highly destructive alfalfa snout beetle.

The Northern New York Agricultural Development Program, Cornell Cooperative Extension, and the Shields Lab at Cornell University are partnering to offer farmers a chance at cost sharing in using nematodes to stem the tide of the beetles in the North Country, which can cost a farmer hundreds of dollars per acre in lost harvest.

“Uncontrolled, the beetle can destroy a new alfalfa seeding in just a year or two, with field losses from $250 to $400 per acre,” said Cornell Cooperative Extension Field Crops and Soils Specialist Kitty A. O’Neil.

The farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is making funding available to help underwrite the rearing and application of the native nematodes. Extension personnel are serving as the application conduit.

The deadline for expressing interest in the funding is May 15.

St. Lawrence County farmers may contact O’Neil at 854-1218, kitty.oneil@cornell.edu, to get more info.

“Early adopting producers who have applied the nematodes to multiple fields within an area have reported a significant decline in the alfalfa snout beetle population on their farm and are now successfully growing alfalfa again,” says Cornell Cooperative Extension Field Crops Specialist Michael E. Hunter.

To date, nematodes have been applied to between 8,000 and 10,000 acres of northern New York farmland. A single application is enough to prompt success, according to the NNYADP.

“On-farm research in northern New York in the past seven years indicates that just a single application of the biocontrol nematodes is required in a field as the nematodes will persist in the field for many years,” says entomologist Elson Shields.

The most recent research funded by the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program shows that the nematodes will persist through a corn crop grown after alfalfa in the same field.

The project is also encouraging growers to plant varieties of alfalfa that are increasingly resistant to the pest, as identified by the selective breeding project funded by the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program and managed by the Cornell University Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics.

Farmers interested in participating in the cost-sharing program will find guidelines on the home page at www.nnyagdev.org.

The funding for the cost-sharing program was made possible through the $600,000 appropriated to the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program in the 2014-2015 New York State Budget.

The nematode biocontrol concept that arose from NNY alfalfa fields is now being evaluated to control pests in berry crops in northern New York and, with funding through the New York Farm Viability Institute, in grape and organic apple crops elsewhere in New York State.

For more information about the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program, a complete list of 2015 projects, and results of the past projects, visit the Program website at www.nnyagdev.org.