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Agricultural Engineer

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You are an agricultural engineer who specializes in potato crop insects. Because you are such a well-known and respected scientist, you have been invited to join a team of researchers in Nebraska to study the adult corn rootworm.

"Communication skills are very important for agricultural engineers because most projects are now done in team settings and in order to be effective, agricultural engineers must be able to express their ideas in written form," says Loren Bode, an agricultural engineer.

Oh boy! You don't know much about Nebraska, or corn for that matter. You hit the books to research as much as you can about the rootworm before you arrive to greet your colleagues.

"Engineers must have good reading skills, as they must spend considerable time in researching the problem they are working on," says Bode.

Read the excerpt below and answer the following questions in order to impress others with your knowledge of corn rootworms:

Managing Corn Rootworm Adults:

The western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera Le Conte, and the northern corn rootworm, D.barberi Smith and Lawrence, annually cost corn producers millions of dollars.

Costs include the purchase and application of insecticides and yield losses due to root feeding by larvae -- like plant removal, negative impact on corn plant physiology, and harvest losses due to lodged corn.

In Nebraska, adult corn rootworm control programs have been used to manage rootworm populations in continuous corn since the 1960s. The goal of adult spray programs is to suppress corn rootworm beetle populations and reduce egg-laying larvae so that larval populations the following season will not cause economic loss.

Most of the insecticides used for beetle control are aerially applied in Nebraska, with some applications spread through sprinkler irrigation systems, called chemigation. Most of the insecticide formulations currently used are "contact kill" products, which means beetles are killed if they are directly hit by spray droplets or by walking on sprayed surfaces.

(Excerpt from Managing Corn Rootworm Adults by Robert J. Wright and Lance Meinke. Permission for use granted by Jim Kalisch of UNL)

  1. Why does the corn rootworm cost corn producers millions of dollars per year?
  2. What is the goal of adult spray programs?
  3. What is chemigation?
  4. What does the term "contact kill" mean?

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