Arable: Yellow Wheat Blossom Midge - an emergent threat to UK wheat production Completed Project uri icon

description

  • Yellow Wheat Blossom Midge (YWBM) is a poorly understood and often under-reported insect pest of wheat, the UK's most widely grown crop. Midge larvae feed on the wheat flower, preventing grain formation and leading to significant yield losses. All wheat varieties are reported to be susceptible to this pest. In some years, the ideal conditions required for adult midges to emerge from dormancy in the soil, mate and lay eggs occur just as the wheat is at its most vulnerable to attack. However, YWBM damage varies from year-to-year and is currently difficult to predict. This project aims to further our knowledge of this pest and its impact on the wheat crop. In related pest midges, adult females produce a volatile sex pheromone which allows adult males to locate females prior to mating. Synthetic versions of these pheromones released from simple traps are widely used in many crops to monitor midge pests and identify when and where control strategies must be applied. By identifying the sex pheromone of YWBM in this project, we will have completed the necessary first step in developing an appropriate monitoring tool for use in UK wheat crops. We have previously identified experimental NIAB wheat lines that showed no YWBM damage in seasons when midge levels were high in adjacent varieties. With help from plant breeding companies, we will test these promising lines more thoroughly. We will grow them in small field plots at several locations across the UK, and measure YWBM levels in resistant NIAB lines and in susceptible commercial varieties. We will collect unripe wheat ears containing live YWBM larvae, and soil samples containing dormant pupae, from these and other sites to provide a source of midges. Young midges will be reared individually at NIAB East Malling until they emerge as adults. NIAB and NRI specialists will collect the volatile chemicals produced by groups of adult males and females. Through electrophysiological experiments at NRI, we will identify which chemicals produced by female midges can be detected by the males as likely components of the sex pheromone. Using chemical analysis and our experience in identifying other midge pheromones, we will begin identification of the YWBM sex pheromone components. If supply of midges and time allows, we will synthesize these likely components for further testing. NIAB will also explore the feasibility of maintaining a laboratory colony of YWBM for future work into the life cycle of this important pest.

date/time interval

  • April 30, 2023 - October 31, 2023