nursery & plantation insect pests

95
Nursery & Plantation Insect Pests

Upload: keefe-palmer

Post on 02-Jan-2016

74 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Nursery & Plantation Insect Pests. Reference. Forest Nursery Pests USDA Forest Service Ag Handbook 680. Nursery & Plantation Insect Pests. Chewing or sapsucking mouthparts Damage seedlings by feeding on roots, stem, shoot and buds - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nursery &Plantation InsectPests

Page 2: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Reference

Forest Nursery Pests

USDA Forest Service AgHandbook 680

Page 3: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nursery & Plantation Insect Pests

•Chewing or sapsucking mouthparts

•Damage seedlings by feeding on roots, stem, shoot and buds •Causes seedling mortality, reduces seedling grade, culls

Page 4: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Insecticides used in nurseriesName Action “Group” LD 50

Asana SynP 4th Gen 2000

Pounce SynP 3rd Gen 4000

Chlorpyrifos OP - Phenyl - 2000

Diazinon OP Phenyl - 400

Cygon OP Alaphatic 150*

Acephate OP Alaphatic 2000

Malathion OP Alaphatic 4000

Page 5: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nursery Insect Pests

•White GrubsPhyllophaga spp.

•100 different species and other genera of white grubs include: Diplotaxis, Dichelonyx, Serica, & Cotalpa

Page 6: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Symptoms:

• Seedling foliage turns brown, seedling roots cut off, 3-5 mm gouges in larger roots, tap root severed, smaller roots missing.

• Occurs in a) newly established nurseries, b) 2-3 yr post fumigation and c) in outplanting areas with sod.

•Found throughout eastern United States

Page 7: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Identification

•Grubs always “C” shaped•Found in soil near roots•Roots appear sparse or have chewed upon look

Page 8: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Identification

Adults large brown or black beetles May beetles, June bugs, Green June Beetles, Japanese beetles

Page 9: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Life cycle: 3-yr- sometimes only 2-yr in southern US

•Eggs laid in summer in soil near seedlings•Larvae feed on roots until fall, then burrow deep in soil, hibernate in the soil.•Spring, move back up to feed on roots•Cycle repeated two more years, •Larvae grow bigger each year, cause increasing damage

Page 10: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Life Cycle

•Larvae complete growth third spring.•Pupate in soil for a few weeks.•Adults emerge from pupal case but remain in soil until next spring•Fly to oaks, feed, mate, lay eggs.

Page 11: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Life Cycle:

•Adults strongly attracted to lights & often found in pools of water

•Nocturnal feeders on hardwoods, especially oaks and can defoliate stands of oaks

Page 12: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Damage

• Very injurious to seedlings

• Damage worst within a few 100 yards of Quercus sp

• Adults do not fly far from food to lay eggs

• 1 larva/sq ft causes serious damage

Page 13: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

White Grub Management

Keep adult food plants such as Quercus sp away from Nursery. Beetles are lazy and poor fliers.

Insecticides• Fumigate beds with MBr/Chl before sowing• Granular insecticides effective • Dipping of seedlings in insecticide reduces damage after outplanting - high risk sites.•Scalping, removing sod when replanting fields.

Page 14: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests
Page 15: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests
Page 16: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

•Scalping, removing sod when replanting fields.

Page 17: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nursery Insect Pest

•Lesser Cornstalk borerElasmopalgus lignosellus

•Found throughout the southern US

•Larva feed upon the seedling stem; mortality, secondary pathogens enter

Page 18: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer

•Look for wounds just below to just above the ground level.•Bark may be completely or partially removed.•Partially girdled seedlings may have a gall/swelling on stem.•Seedlings turn chlorotic, orange, and die; remain standing upright or tip over.

Page 19: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer

•Larva less than an inch in length•Pale green with brown bands/stripes•May produce silk tunnels in soil•Wriggle furiously when handled•Rare to find•Adult moths, more commonly observed•Moth-like in color, fly erratically above seedlings, about an inch across.

Page 20: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer larva

Page 21: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer adult

Page 22: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer

•Insect has 2-4 generations per year.•Late summer, all life stages are present.•Adult moths emerge from the soil in late spring, mate and female deposits eggs at base of seedlings. •Eggs hatch within 7 days and larva feed on lower stem, or subterranean roots.•Larva feed 3 wks, pupate in soil, emerge, mate lay eggs. •Over winter as both larva and pupae in soil.

Page 23: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Lesser cornstalk borer• Cover crops, sandy soils and drought favor LCB activity.

• Insect prefers corn, but it also feeds on beans, cowpeas, crabgrass, Johnson grass, peas, peanuts, sorghum, soybeans, and wheat. Watch your cover crop!

• Cultivation promotes, rather than retards, injury by insect. Damage is less under no-tillage cropping systems which is attributed to increased soil moisture and the presence of decaying organic matter.

• Insecticides available to use against LCB; chlorpyrifos, carboryl

Page 24: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nursery Insect Pests

•Tarnish Plant Bug - Lygus linecolaris

• Attacks a wide variety of economically important herbaceous plants, vegetable crops, commercial flower plants, fruit trees, and nursery stock.

• Lygus bugs occur in all Canadian provinces, the continental United States and most of Mexico.

• Approximately 50% of loblolly pine seedlings in one southern forest nursery was damaged by Lygus bugs.

Page 25: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tarnish plant bug – Lygus Bug

Page 26: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tarnish Plant Bug

• The insect over winters as adults in dead weeds, under tree bark, nursery margins, ditch banks, and road rights-of-way.

• Become active in early spring and feed on newly developing seedling buds and shoots. Most nursery damage occurs from mid-April to late June.

• Oviposition is restricted to composite host plants (non-conifers) where eggs are deposited at the base of the leaf blade.

Page 27: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tarnish Plant Bug

• After 7-10 days, yellowish-green nymphs emerge and begin feeding. The life cycle is completed in 3 - 4 wks.

• There are 2-3 generations per year.

• At least 385 host plants have been recorded for Lygus with most in the Rosidae and Asteridae families.

• The insect also attacks pine seedlings which are severely damaged.

Page 28: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tarnish Plant Bug

• Adults and nymphs of Lygus feed by sucking plant juices and inject into the plant a watery saliva to aid in the breakdown of plant tissues.

• The feeding causes terminal growth to be distorted thereby reducing plant growth. Damaged by Lygus feeding has been called "crazy cotton", "stop-back", "bush- head", "bushy-top."

• Symptoms appear within a few weeks after feeding and apical dominance is lost and weak multiple leaders appear.

Page 29: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tarnish Plant Bug

• In conifer seedlings, terminal needles are thicker and shorter and the tip is often curled

• The removal of preferred host plants from edges of nurseries and destruction of favorable overwintering sites will help to reduce the damages caused by Lygus. Weed hosts include butterweed, fleabane, goldenrod, vetch, dock, and dog fennel.

• Several insecticides are available to control populations of Lygus.

Page 30: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

“Bushy-Top” symptoms of Lygus bug feeding damage

Page 31: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Insecticide treated bed Non-treated bed

Page 32: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Mole crickets:

Important in nurseries but not always recognized.

Southern pest, virtually all of Florida, the southern half of Alabama. However, recently found in Anniston. Not a problem in cold climates

Mole cricket inactive until soil reaches60 F. Feed at night, in upper 1 inch of soil

Page 33: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Mole crickets

Page 34: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Damage - Two types of crickets Southern Mole cricket, Tunneling disrupts roots, uproots seedlings but does not feed on roots

Tawney mole cricket Feeds on roots, damage can be serious. Is common in Florida, rarer as move north.

Tawney Mole cricket

Southern mole cricket

Page 35: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Mole cricket damage in nursery bed

Page 36: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Mole cricket damage in nursery bed

Page 37: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Identification

Southern Mole cricket: gray with white spots, “U” shaped space between claws

Tawney Mole cricket: Tan and has “V” shaped space between claws.

Page 38: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tawney Mole cricket digging leg (V shaped notch)

Page 39: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Biology

•Adults over-winter in deep soil burrows.•Adults lay eggs in soil chambers, which hatch in June. Pupate in soil for a few weeks.

•Two peaks of feeding activity.

•First in March/April when overwintering adults begin feeding. •Second in Sept/Oct when the new generation of nymphs feed and the adults continue to feed.

•Second peak most damaging. There is only one generation per year

Page 40: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Management - Insecticides

1st peak of activity- Control optional due to low numbers. Usually when it is observed.

2nd Peak – Use Orthene, Dursban

Biological control. Parasitic wasps and nematodes available

Populations monitored/controlled using artificial cricket callers

Page 41: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Cutworms

Several species ofNoctuidae

Page 42: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Distributed all over U.S. with the most damaging in Lake States and southern US.

High populations can destroy1000’s of seedlings in a fewweeks

Damage symptoms include cut off needles and seedlings clipped at soil level Chemical sprays and fumigation are effective - diazinon, Chlorpyrifos

Page 43: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Most injurious weevils in US

•Black vine weevil•Strawberry root weevil•Rough strawberry weevil

Fortunately they do not occur here – but some get close as Virginia

Page 44: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

“Regeneration”

Weevils

Pales weevil Hylobius pales

Pitch eating weevil Pachylobius picivorus

Page 45: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pales Weevil - Found throughout S.E.

Page 46: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pitch eating weevil more common along Gulf Coast

Page 47: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pales and Pitch eating weevils

• Most serious threat to newly planted in cut over areas. • Attack all species of pines with 90% mortality reported. 30-60% more common.

• Difficult to separate two weevils and not necessary for practical purposes.

• Both are robust, black to reddish-brownone-half inch long. Elytra have small patches of yellow hairs

Page 48: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Biology

• Adults attracted to fresh resin odor and they invade recently cut over areas and lay eggs in pine stumps / roots. • Eggs hatch in 5-10 days and the larvae feed on inner bark of dead roots - not a problem. • Weevils pupate in chip cocoons and adults fly to new seedlings feed on tender bark of pine branches. • Newly planted seedlings = girdle stem and kill• 2 generations/yr but adults present year round in south.

Page 49: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pales Weevil Damage

Page 50: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pales Weevil Damage

Page 51: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Management

Cultural – Delay regeneration/planting

Chemical- Insecticides (Pounce or WayLay)Prior to lifting – over the topAt time of packing – on the rootsIn the field (spot) – in the planting hole

Page 52: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Planting Recommendations – Cultural

Log in Winter or Spring & Replant following Winter or Spring = Low loss of seedlings from Weevil attacks (6%)

Log in Summer Replant following Winter = Moderate loss of seedlings from Weevil attacks (20%)

Log in Fall Replant that Winter = Severe loss of seedlings from Weevil attacks (58%)

Page 53: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Why is timing important?

Weevils attracted to cut timber areas &lay eggs at base of stumps. They reproduce in large numbers.

Immediate replanting means you areputting the seedlings (500/acre) into a “sea” of weevils.

Waiting one year allows the insects time to disperse from the area.

Page 54: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Terminal and Shoot Insects

These insects kill growing tip of treesboth terminal and laterals

This results in deformed trees and reduced growth

Page 55: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

3 groups:

Lepidoptera – Tip Moths

Coleoptera - Weevils

Coleoptera- Shoot Borers

Plantation Insect PestsTerminal and Shoot Insects

Page 56: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pest species of Rhyacionia in the Eastern U.S.

Rhyacionia frustranaNantucket Pine Tip Moth

Rhyacionia rigidanaPitch Pine Tip Moth

Rhyacionia subtropicaSubtropical Pine Tip Moth

Rhyacionia buolianaEuropean Pine Shoot Moth

Page 57: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

R. subtropica(SPTM)black

R. buoliana(EPSM)blue

R. rigidana(PPTM)orange

R. frustrama(NPTM)pink

Page 58: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tip and Shoot Moths

•Rhyacionia frustrana- most important•Very small, grayish/brown moths

Page 59: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Rhyacionia Generalized Life Cycle

OW as pupae

Multiple Generations:

3-4 here

5 in Mobile area?

6 in Florida?

Page 60: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Nantucket pine tip moth damage

Page 61: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Death of growing tip results in deformed trees and reduced growth rate

Page 62: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Heavily Infested Whorl

Page 63: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Other tip moths:

Rhyacionia neomexicana - Southwestern Pine Tip Moth

Rhyacionia bushnelliWestern Pine Tip Moth

Dioryctria spp.Pine shoot moths - attack shoots and cones

Petrova spp Pitch nodule moth

Page 64: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Impact of Tip Moths

•Slow growth of trees•Degrade quality, bushy / fork trees•Increase rotation times

**Most important problem for Christmas Tree growers

**Second most important problem ofcommercial timber producers

Page 65: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Management:

Site Preparation

Chemical Control

Page 66: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Control Approaches

1. Calendar sprays of insecticide

2. Timed insecticide applications for adult control

3. Timed insecticide applications to kill larvae

Timing is based on pheromone collection of adults and use of temperature-driven degree day models.

Page 67: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Tip Moth Control using Pheromone Traps and Temperature-driven Predictive Models

•Establish Pheromone-baited sticky traps

•8-10 traps established throughout Plantation, at least 15 feet apart

•In our area, traps should be placed according to the dates below:

Generation 1 - February 15Generation 2 - May 15Generation 3 - July 6

•Exam traps daily for moths - When first moth is found in any trap, begin monitoring and recording daily maximum and minimum temperature.

Page 68: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

When appropriate number of degree days has been reached, spray the next day

Generation 1 -- 439 degree days

Generation 2 -- 626 degree days

Generation 3 (2 sprays)

At 480 degree daysAgain at 840 degree days

Page 69: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Insecticides kill young larvae as they hatch from the egg and move to feeding sites.

Larva

Page 70: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Damaging Species of Pissodes:

P. strobi - White Pine Weevil

P. approximatus - northern pine weevil

P. nemorensis - Deodar Weevil

Terminal Weevils

Page 71: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Pissodes Adult Weevil – white pine weevil

Page 72: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Deodar weevil adult

Page 73: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Deodar weevil larva creating chip cocoon

Page 74: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests
Page 75: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Damage causedby Pissodes

Page 76: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

•Weevils kill the last 2 years of terminal growth

•Repeated attacks cause stunting and deformation

•Commercially unusable

•Small trees may be killed

Page 77: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Control

Control is difficult

Pines under a hardwood canopy areseldom attacked

Insecticides may protect terminalsunder some circumstances

Page 78: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Shoot Beetles

Common Shoot beetle - Tomicus piniperda

Discovered in 1992 in Ohio – Introduced from Asia

Page 79: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Distribution of Tomicus piniperda Asia: China, Japan. Europe: all countries North America:

Canada - South Western Ontario

Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, New York.

Perfers pines: White, red, jack, Scotch, Austrian but will use spruce and fir

Page 80: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Behaves like a weevil, pine beetle and atip moth

Females attracted to stressed trees

Lay eggs in galleries; blue stains

Larva feed on pholem; killing trees

Adults emerge and then feed in shoot tips

Page 81: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Larval galleries ofTomicus beetlesunder bark

Page 82: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Shoot damage caused by feeding of Tomicus

Page 83: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Shoot exit hole of Tomicus

Page 84: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Twig Girdlers and Pruners

Page 85: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests
Page 87: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Importance and Distribution

Page 88: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Symptoms

Page 89: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Symptoms

Page 90: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Life Cycle

Page 92: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Population Dynamics & Damage

Page 93: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Mgmt &

Control

Preventative

Biological

Page 94: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

Inoculating Pinus patula with parasitic nematode (D. siricidicola)

Page 95: Nursery & Plantation  Insect Pests

End of Nursery & Plantation Pests