Glacier FarmMedia – There is one export Canadian agricultural producers do not want from their U.S. brethren, and that’s the Macrosteles quadrilineatus (aster leafhopper).
The pest injects a phytoplasma into the plant, affecting hormones.
The leafhoppers spread aster yellows disease, which affects over 300 plants; including crops like canola, wheat and carrots as a generalist pest.
University of Calgary continues breakthroughs in agriculture research with canola crops in fight against pod shattering
Testing for leafhopper aster yellows infection using laboratory and field-adaptable DNA extraction has improved by leaps and bounds. Confirmation comes within a half an hour compared to a week previously.
Why it Matters: The speed at which pests can be identified, and the conditions and best practices used in combating them, are crucial in saving yields in various crops.
“Where do the leafhoppers come from, and when they come in, how infected are they? This is the key to the outbreaks,” said Tyler Wist, a research scientist in field crop entomology, during his Pest-Side Story presentation at the 2026 Irrigated Crop Production Update in Lethbridge.
“There are a few different hypotheses going around. One, they come all the way up from Texas. Two, they come up and they hang around in Nebraska, Kansas and then they come up. Some years they don’t even get all the way to Canada on this northward (wind) migration.”
Aster yellows’ impact on canola yields seems to be linked to moisture levels. Wist showed graphs of big outbreaks in May 2012 and May 2023, with a wide variance of moisture levels at the time. The much drier season in 2023 resulted in less damage overall, backed by a 2015 Elliott/Olivier study of leafhopper feeding density with corresponding canola seed yield in dry and wet conditions.
“I was catching leafhoppers that were infected over 61 per cent of the population, which is completely unheard of for aster yellows hoppers coming up here,” said Wist.
A working hypothesis is that canola seed treated with insecticide kills the leafhopper alongside the flea beetle. Under dry soil conditions, most of the leafhoppers died with 24 hours and did not affect the plants.
Under the wet soil conditions, only about half of the leafhoppers died with the rest remaining to hang around and feed on the plant.
Moist conditions cut down on the impact of the insecticides by taking a lot out of the root zone, where the plant does not pick it up, allowing the leafhopper to survive longer as a vector and increasing the chance of aster yellows infestation.
Source: producer.com