Tyler Balsters, Darren Rebar
Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 126 (3-4), 177-188, (12 March 2023) https://doi.org/10.1660/062.126.0303
KEYWORDS: Cannabis sativa, arthropod pests, Grapholita delineata, Aculops cannibicola, integrated pest management
The 2018 Farm Bill and 2018 Alternative Crop Research Act legalized the production of and research on industrial hemp (Cannabis sativa) in Kansas starting in 2019. As industrial hemp has not been commercially grown in the United States since the 1950s, its legalization presents unique possibilities for Kansas farmers and researchers. However, its reintroduction raises questions about the arthropod community it may harbor, whether hemp-specific pests are still present in Kansas, and how those arthropods may impact hemp production. We thus characterized the arthropod community residing on industrial hemp from four growing locations at the John C. Pair Horticulture Center (Kansas State University) in Haysville, Kansas. We first compared sampling techniques (vacuuming or sweep-netting), finding that each method captured a distinct community of arthropods, but that the spatially separated locations were similar. We then pooled samples to look at overall community structure, identifying 58.40% as pests, 22.03% as natural predators, 16.09% as neutral arthropods, and 3.48% as parasitoids. Pests were further grouped by how they damage plants, identifying 41.14% as stem/leaf suckers, 30.53% as bud/stem borers, 18.95% as root chewers, and 9.39% as bud/leaf chewers. While not present in our samples, concurrent studies at the Horticulture Center identified two hemp-specific pests, Eurasian hemp borers and hemp russet mites. The presence of certain arthropod pests, including the hemp-specific pests found in concurrent studies, provides a starting point for pest management practices in the production of industrial hemp.