Planthopper

Common name

 

Scientific name

Two species of planthopper infest rice. These are the brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens (Stal); and the whitebacked planthopper (WBH),  Sogatella furcifera (Horvath).

What it does

High populations of planthoppers cause leaves to initially turn orange-yellow before becoming brown and drying. This condition, called hopperburn, kills the plant. Brown planthoppers can also transmit ragged stunt and grassy stunt diseases. Neither disease can be cured.

Why and where it occurs

Planthoppers can be a problem in rainfed and irrigated wetland environments, and in areas with continuous submerged conditions in the field, high shade and humidity.

Closed canopy of the rice plants, densely seeded crops, excessive use of nitrogen, and early season insecticide spraying also favors isect development.

How to identify

Check for the presence of insect:

  • crescent-shaped white eggs inserted into the midrib or leaf sheath
  • white to brown nymphs
  • brown or white adults feeding near the base of tillers

Check the field for:

  • Hopperburn or yellowing, browning and drying of plant
  • Ovipositional marks exposing the plant to fungal and bacterial infections
  • Presence of honeydew and sooty molds in the bases of areas infected
  • Plants with ragged stunt or grassy stunt virus disease

Hopperburn is similar to the feeding damage or "bugburn" caused by the rice black bug. To confirm hopperburn caused by planthoppers, check for the presence of sooty molds at the base of the plant.

How to manage

Outbreaks result when pesticides destroy natural enemies (BPH eggs hatch unchecked, and surviving BPH quickly build-up populations to damaging levels), or when longwinged planthoppers are carried in by the wind.

To prevent outbreaks:

  • Remove weeds from the field and surrounding areas.
  • Avoid indiscriminate insecticide use, which destroys natural enemies.
  • Use a resistant variety.
  • Critical numbers: At a density of 1 BPH/stem or less there is still time to act in case the numbers increase.
  • Look for BPH daily in the seedbed, or weekly in the field, on stems and the water surface. Check each side of the seed bed (or direct-seeded fields). For older rice plants, grasp the plant, bend it over slightly, and gently tap it near the base to see if planthoppers fall onto the water surface. For transplanted rice look at bases of 10 to 20 hills as you cross the field diagonally. There is no need to scout for BPH or WBPH beyond the milk stage.
  • Use light traps (e.g., an electric bulb or kerosene lamp near a light colored wall or over a pan of water) at night when rice is prone to planthopper attack. Do not place lights near seedbeds or fields. If the light trap is inundated with hundreds of BPH, it's a signal to check your seedbed or field immediately; then scout every day for the next few weeks. If farmers monitor on a daily basis anyway, then a light trap is unnecessary.

To control planthoppers:

Mechanical & physical measures:

  • Flood the seedbed, for a day, so that only the tips of seedlings are exposed will control BPH.
  • Sweep small seedbeds with a net to remove some BPH (but not eggs), particularly from dry seed beds. At high BPH densities, sweeping will not remove sufficient numbers of BPH from the base of the plant.

Biological control:

  • If natural enemies out-number BPH the risk of hopperburn is low. Even rice already damaged by hopperburn should not be treated with insecticides if natural enemies out-number BPH. Natural enemies of BPH include water striders, mirid bugs, spiders, and various egg parasitoids.

Chemical control:

Only apply an insecticide to the seedbed for BPH or WBPH if all of these conditions are met:

  • an average of more than 1 planthopper per stem,
  • on average, more planthoppers than natural enemies,
  • flooding the seedbed is not an option.

Learn more

View full fact sheet:
Planthopper on IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank