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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Ornamental Pest Management (Category 3B) Biology and Management of Pests Chapter 6
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A “stab in the dark” approach to pest management is seldom effective. It may injure desirable organisms.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Effective Pest Management F Requires... –Knowledge of pest life cycle –Feeding habits –Hosts –Environmental interaction –Reproductive behavior
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Diseases of Ornamentals F Disease = disturbance of normal plant function. –Noninfectious (abiotic) EnvironmentalEnvironmental Cultural practicesCultural practices –Infectious FungiFungi BacteriaBacteria VirusVirus
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Apple Scab Life Cycle infected leaves fall Winter fungus overwinters on fallen leaves Spring spores blown to new leaves leaf to leaf infection Summer
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Plant Diseases F Grouped according to: –Causal agent –Symptoms they produce
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Disease Symptoms F Leaf spots F Scab F Rusts F Powdery mildew F Mosaics F Chlorosis F Scorch F Witches’ broom
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Disease Symptoms F Anthracnose F Cankers F Blights F Wilts F Decline F Galls F Rots
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Scab
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Rust
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Cedar-Hawthorne Rust Cedar-Apple Rust
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Powdery Mildew
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Mosaic
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Chlorosis: Oak and Maple
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Witch’s broom caused by Anthracnose
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Anthracnose on foliage and in woody tissue.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Fireblight on Mountain Ash
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Root rot problem on Rhododendron
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Common symptom of tree decline.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Host Susceptibility F Plant selection F Plant parts F Vigor
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Weather Conditions F Humidity F Rainfall F Temperature
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Microclimate F Shade F Wind F Salt F Location F Crowding
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Infectious Disease Management F Resistance –Superior species, cultivars, varieties F Avoidance –Appropriate site conditions F Elimination –Sanitation; some fungicides F Protection –Most fungicides
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Although cultural and environmental disorders are most common, “bugs” are perceived as the likely cause of a problem.
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Insects of Ornamentals F Capable of wide variety of injury F May go through several life stages F Activity and injury often seasonal F Classified by physical characteristics F Classified by behavior
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Insect Classification by Feeding Behavior F Piercing - sucking F Leaf-chewing F Tent and case-making F Gall-forming F Root-feeding F Boring
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects F Aphids F Leafhoppers F Plant bugs F Mealybugs F Thrips
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Aphids
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Pine Needle Scale
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Magnolia Scale
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Sooty mold grows on the honey dew secreted from piercing-sucking insects.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Plant Bug
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Piercing-sucking Insects Leaf Hopper Injury
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects F Caterpillars F Sawflies F Leafminers F Leaf beetles F Weevils
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects Eastern Tent Caterpillar
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects Pine Sawfly
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects Oak leaf miner (moth) Birch Leaf Miner (sawfly)
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects Japanese Beetle
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects Black Vine Weevil: Adult, pupae, larvae (legless), and foliar damage
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Leaf-Chewing Insects White grub of Japanese beetle: a root feeder.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Maple Bladder Gall
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Cooley Spruce Gall
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Bronze Birch Borer exit hole
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Insect Management F Protection for insects: –Pupal stage –Waxy coating –Galls –Bark –Leaf tissue –Soil
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Insect Management- Consider: F Susceptible life stage F Damaging stage F Period of feeding F Weather conditions F Number of generations F Host tolerance F Natural enemies
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Non-Chemical Insect Controls F Improve plant vigor F Encourage natural enemies F Select plants with resistance F Modify the environment
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Natural enemies of insects can provide safe, long lasting “control.” Pesticides can upset this balance and increase some problems.
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Insecticides F Avoid problems: –Monitor plants for insects –Protect beneficials –Time for appropriate life stage –Avoid preventative pesticide treatments –Use the least toxic materials
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Mites F Not insects (eight legs) F Rasp leaf cells and suck contents –Causes bronzing F Some form webs or galls F Weather dependent - prefer hot spots F Rapid population build up F Paper test
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Spider mites Webbing Bronzing
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Nematodes F Microscopic worms F Commonly attack roots or vascular system F Symptoms: wilting, stunting, dieback F Resistance F Few nematicides F Detection - MSU Lab
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Snails and slugs leave irregular holes in foliage where they feed and slime trails where they’ve traveled.
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Snails and Slugs F Soft bodied animals F Weather and site dependent F Slime trail F Not controlled by insecticides F Sanitation and traps
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Vertebrates F Cause damage by: –Chewing –Rubbing –Drilling
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MSU Extension Pesticide Education Squirrel damage Rabbit damage
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Wildlife 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.
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THEEND Prepared by : Greg Patchan, Julie Stachecki, and Kay Sicheneder MSU Extension Pesticide Education Program
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