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Bird damage to sugar beet
Authors:R. A. Dunning
Affiliation:Broom's Barn Experimental Station, Higham, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
Abstract:Pest damage to sugar beet, including that by birds, has been recorded since 1957. During that time damage by rooks has decreased almost to nil, but some other bird damage has greatly increased, most probably as a result of changing agronomic practices, especially the extensive use of herbicides, the introduction of monogerm seed, and the increasing practice of ‘planting-to-a-stand’. The most severe bird damage in the spring is grazing by several species, and in early summer localized felling of plants by pheasants. Observations in the mid–1960's of causes of seedling and plant losses suggested that birds were then of minor importance; the British Sugar Corporation currently consider that birds are the most serious pest of sugar beet. The distribution of the reported damage does not seem to follow any national pattern. In small-plot field trials possible repellent materials such as anthraquinone, methiocarb or thiram, applied to seed or foliage, did not decrease the extent of grazing.
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