Dalbulus maidis and Dalbulus spp.
Nature of damage
- Direct feeding and sucking of plant juices. Transmission of virus and spiroplasmas, including corn stunt spiroplasma (Sprioplasma kunkelii) resulting in corn stunt.
Signs
- Sooty mold accumulation where leafhoppers deposit sticky honeydew while feeding.
- Stunting and premature wilting of leaves.
- Symptoms of corn stunt including chlorotic stripes on young leaves, leaf purpling, excessive tillering and cobbing and formation of barren cobs.
Factors favoring development
- Continous, overlapping maize cropping.
- Late planting where climatic conditions favor insect development.
- Dry conditions.
Geographic distribution
- Two of the pathogens for which this leafhopper is a vector, the corn stunt spiroplasma (Rio grande strain) and maize rayadofino virus, are distributed throughout the tropical and subtropical belts of the American continent.
- The third, corn stunt mycoplasma (Mesa Central strain), is apparently restricted to the Mexican highlands.
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