Enter Intrepid Edge
Fast forward a few years, Mr Harber now works as a Territory Sales Manager at Corteva Agriscience, and the company offers a powerful new tool for the management of Fall armyworm (FAW) in pulse and maize crops.
Intrepid Edge® Jemvelva® active combines two unique modes of action from Group 5 and 18 insecticides, with active ingredients Jemvelva and methoxyfenozide delivering both a fast-acting knockdown of pests and a residual activity that protects the crop between applications.
Intrepid Edge is active on eggs, all larval instars and adults, while being selective to key beneficial insects.
Gloucester Rural Supplies Manager-Director, Troy Higgins, said since FAW arrived three years ago, its prevalence had increased to become a significant pest in both crops and pastures.
Adult FAW can migrate almost 500 kilometres per generation and produce up to 2000 eggs in their lifetime, leading to fast population build-up. The larva is the damaging stage of FAW, attacking a broad range of crops with a preference for maize.
“It took a bit of time to actually identify what was attacking maize crops early in the piece, as most people thought it was Heliothis, but every maize crop planted last year was damaged in some way from FAW” Mr Higgins said.
“Any crop planted early in the season, in early October, was hardly damaged compared to those planted later, from mid-November onwards. The early crops may have been under less stress from moisture, and a bit cooler soil and air temps prevented hatching of FAW, whereas the later-sown crops were heat and moisture stressed, making them a far easier target for the pest.
“Crop yield in some instances would have been reduced by at least five tonnes per hectare.”