Title: Ornamental Pest Management (Category 3B)
1Ornamental Pest Management (Category 3B)
- Biology and Management of Pests
- Chapter 6
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3Effective Pest Management
- Requires...
- Knowledge of pest life cycle
- Feeding habits
- Hosts
- Environmental interaction
- Reproductive behavior
4Diseases of Ornamentals
- Disease disturbance of normal plant function.
- Noninfectious (abiotic)
- Environmental
- Cultural practices
- Infectious
- Fungi
- Bacteria
- Virus
5Apple Scab Life Cycle
Summer
Spring
leaf to leaf infection
spores blown to new leaves
infected leaves fall
Winter
fungus overwinters on fallen leaves
6Plant Diseases
- Grouped according to
- Causal agent
- Symptoms they produce
7Disease Symptoms
- Leaf spots
- Scab
- Rusts
- Powdery mildew
- Mosaics
- Chlorosis
- Scorch
- Witches broom
8Disease Symptoms
- Anthracnose
- Cankers
- Blights
- Wilts
9Scab
10Rust
11Cedar-Apple Rust
Cedar-Hawthorne Rust
12Powdery Mildew
13Mosaic
14Chlorosis Oak and Maple
15Witchs broom caused by Anthracnose
16Anthracnose on foliage and in woody tissue.
17Fireblight on Mountain Ash
18Root rot problem on Rhododendron
19Common symptom of tree decline.
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21Host Susceptibility
- Plant selection
- Plant parts
- Vigor
22Weather Conditions
- Humidity
- Rainfall
- Temperature
23Microclimate
- Shade
- Wind
- Salt
- Location
- Crowding
24Infectious Disease Management
- Resistance
- Superior species, cultivars, varieties
- Avoidance
- Appropriate site conditions
- Elimination
- Sanitation some fungicides
- Protection
- Most fungicides
25Although cultural and environmental disorders are
most common, bugs are perceived as the likely
cause of a problem.
26Insects of Ornamentals
- Capable of wide variety of injury
- May go through several life stages
- Activity and injury often seasonal
- Classified by physical characteristics
- Classified by behavior
27Insect Classification by Feeding Behavior
- Piercing - sucking
- Leaf-chewing
- Tent and case-making
- Gall-forming
- Root-feeding
- Boring
28Piercing-sucking Insects
- Aphids
- Leafhoppers
- Plant bugs
- Mealybugs
- Thrips
29Piercing-sucking Insects
Aphids
30Piercing-sucking Insects
Pine Needle Scale
31Piercing-sucking Insects
Magnolia Scale
32Piercing-sucking Insects
Sooty mold grows on the honey dew secreted from
piercing-sucking insects.
33Piercing-sucking Insects
Plant Bug
34Piercing-sucking Insects
Leaf Hopper Injury
35Leaf-Chewing Insects
- Caterpillars
- Sawflies
- Leafminers
- Leaf beetles
- Weevils
36Leaf-Chewing Insects
Eastern Tent Caterpillar
37Leaf-Chewing Insects
Pine Sawfly
38Leaf-Chewing Insects
Birch Leaf Miner (sawfly)
Oak leaf miner (moth)
39Leaf-Chewing Insects
Japanese Beetle
40Leaf-Chewing Insects
Black Vine Weevil Adult, pupae, larvae
(legless), and foliar damage
41Leaf-Chewing Insects
White grub of Japanese beetle a root feeder.
42Maple Bladder Gall
43Cooley Spruce Gall
44Bronze Birch Borer exit hole
45Insect Management
- Protection for insects
- Pupal stage
- Waxy coating
- Galls
- Bark
- Leaf tissue
- Soil
46Insect Management- Consider
- Susceptible life stage
- Damaging stage
- Period of feeding
- Weather conditions
- Number of generations
- Host tolerance
- Natural enemies
47Non-Chemical Insect Controls
- Improve plant vigor
- Encourage natural enemies
- Select plants with resistance
- Modify the environment
48Natural enemies of insects can provide safe, long
lasting control. Pesticides can upset this
balance and increase some problems.
49Insecticides
- Avoid problems
- Monitor plants for insects
- Protect beneficials
- Time for appropriate life stage
- Avoid preventative pesticide treatments
- Use the least toxic materials
50Mites
- Not insects (eight legs)
- Rasp leaf cells and suck contents
- Causes bronzing
- Some form webs or galls
- Weather dependent - prefer hot spots
- Rapid population build up
- Paper test
51Spider mites
Webbing
Bronzing
52Nematodes
- Microscopic worms
- Commonly attack roots or vascular system
- Symptoms wilting, stunting, dieback
- Resistance
- Few nematicides
- Detection - MSU Lab
53Snails and slugs leave irregular holes in foliage
where they feed and slime trails where theyve
traveled.
54Snails and Slugs
- Soft bodied animals
- Weather and site dependent
- Slime trail
- Not controlled by insecticides
- Sanitation and traps
55Vertebrates
- Cause damage by
- Chewing
- Rubbing
- Drilling
56Rabbit damage
Squirrel damage
57Wildlife control in urban areas can be difficult.
Consider using barriers, repellants and pest
removal tactics. Excluding mice, moles and
chipmunks, trapping vertebrates is regulated by
MDNR.
58THE END Prepared by Greg Patchan, Julie
Stachecki, and Kay Sicheneder MSU Extension
Pesticide Education Program