nursery/landscape pests & disorders identification

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Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

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Page 1: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders

Identification

Page 2: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Insects

Page 3: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Aphid

Small, soft-bodied insects Green, pink, black or yellow

Can be wingless They cluster on tips of new

growth & leaf undersides Suck plant juices

Secrete “Honeydew” A sweet smelling fluid that

attracts ants and causes black sooty fungus to grow on leaves

Page 4: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Bagworm

Caterpillars that make spindle-shaped bags

Attack both deciduous and coniferous trees Really like the

evergreens Will strip the plant of

foliage Often get mistaken for

pine cones

Page 5: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Borer Eventually transforms into a

moth They bore into the bark at

soil level and eat their way through the tree

Small, sawdust piles will appear around base of tree Sometimes sap will ooze

from small holes

Page 6: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Leafhopper• Largest family of

plant-feeding insects

• More leafhopper species worldwide than all species of birds, mammals reptiles and amphibians combined

• They feed by sucking the sap of vascular plants

Page 7: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Leaf Miner A moth that as a caterpillar

lives on the leaves of plants As it feeds, it leaves a trail

or a path way

Page 8: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Scale Sucking insects that insert

tiny, straw-like mouthparts into bark, fruit or leaves

Causes plant to weaken and grow slowly

Different species will harm the plant more than others

Page 9: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Spider Mite Congregate in dense

colonies on the undersides of leaves Damage by puncturing

plant cells You’ll see a silvering or a

stippled effect on top of leaf

When you rub the underside of a plant, the plant will feel gritty

Page 11: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Whitefly Feed by sucking juices from the

leaves and stems of plants Especially vegetable plants

They secrete Honeydew as well They lay eggs on the underside of

the leaf that look like semitransparent scales

Page 12: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

White Grub Larvae of Scarabs or

Beetles Attack the roots of turf

grass and ornamental plants

Damage appears to be drought-like

Page 13: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Diseases

Page 14: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Anthracnose

Fungi that attacks hardwoods Attacks Oaks and Sycamore more than others

Will completely defoliate trees Strip off all leaves

Starts with small parts of necrosis on leaves

Page 15: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Apple Scab A disease of apple trees caused by the

Ascomycete fungus Manifests by dull black or grey-brown

lesions on the surface of tree leaves Fruits are most susceptible Rarely kills the plant but dramatically

reduces yield

Page 16: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Black Spot Fungus that causes Black

Spots or dead spots to appear all over the leaf

Kills the photosynthetic capability of the plant

Page 17: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Botrytis A Necrotrophic fungus

A fungus that causes tissue to die Often referred to as Gray Mold Attacks the fruit of plants

Page 18: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Canker• Encompasses a large

number of plant diseases that have similar symptoms

• Dead tissue that grows over the years

• Cankers vary and each canker has a different effect on the plant

Page 19: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Cedar-Apple Rust• Caused by a fungal pathogen that attacks

crabapples and apples, as well as few junipers• Must move from one type of host to other

Page 20: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Crown Gall

Page 23: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Root Rot

Page 24: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Weeds

Page 25: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Annual Bluegrass

Page 27: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Buckhorn Plantain

Page 28: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Chickweed

Page 36: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Physiological Problems

Page 37: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Frost/Freeze Injury

Page 38: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Iron Deficiency

Page 39: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Leaf Scorch (drought/winter burn)

Page 41: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

Pot-bound roots

Page 42: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

String Trimmer Injury

Page 43: Nursery/Landscape Pests & Disorders Identification

2,4-D Injury