- Author: Sandipa Gautam
Are you interested in learning about the management of sap-sucking pests and ants in citrus orchards? Lindcove is organizing a full-day workshop to bring you recent research advances on sap-sucking insects and ant management. The workshop will focus on ants.
Ants, especially the invasive Argentine ant and the native grey field ant, are serious pests because they protect sap-sucking pests infesting citrus, grapes, and other perennial tree and vine crops, from their natural enemies. In return for protection, hemipteran pests like Asian citrus psyllid mealybugs, soft scales, aphids, and whiteflies reward ants with honeydew, a sticky sugar-rich waste product that ants imbibe and return to nests to feed nest mates. This is an example of food-for-protection mutualism that is highly disruptive to biological control and IPM programs. This workshop will cover the latest developments in ant monitoring and management and will provide overviews of the benefits of ant control and how reductions in ant densities result in very high levels of biological control of important hemipteran pests.
When: 19 September 2023
Where: Conference room, Lindcove Research and Extension Center, 22963 Carson Ave, Exeter, CA 93221
Meeting Registration Link: https://surveys.ucanr.edu/survey.cfm?surveynumber=41086
Workshop Agenda:
Time |
Presenter |
Topic |
8:30am |
|
Registration |
9:00am |
Mark Hoddle, UC Riverside |
Overview of the Asian citrus psyllid biological control program and the need to control pest ants |
9:30am |
Mark Hoddle, UC Riverside |
Use of biodegradable hydrogel beads and bait stations for controlling pest ants in citrus |
10:00am |
Mike Lewis, UC Riverside |
Infrared sensors and the Internet of Things to automate ant counts in orchards |
10:30am |
|
Coffee Break |
10:45am |
David Haviland, UCCE Farm Advisor, Kern County |
Ant management research and applications in the San Joaquin Valley |
11:15am |
Soon Il Kwon, UC Riverside |
Cultural control of ants in orchards |
11:45am |
Nicola Irvin, UC Riverside |
Flowering cover crops to promote natural enemy ecosystem services |
12:15pm |
|
Lunch |
1:00pm |
Sandipa Gautam, UCCE Area Citrus IPM Advisor |
Hemipteran pests and their management in SJV citrus |
1:30pm |
All presenters |
Table visits and posters to observe technologies that were discussed and to interact with presenters and ask questions |
2:00pm |
David Haviland/Hoddle Lab |
Field demonstration of hydrogel applications for ant control |
3:00m |
|
Workshop Ends |
- Author: Sandipa Gautam
This weekend Lindcove hosts the annual citrus fruit display.
Event: Oranges, mandarins, lemons, limes, grapefruit, pomelos, and citrons and many other citrus varieties – 180 citrus varieties will be on display
Place: Lindcove REC, 22963 Carson Avenue
Time: 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM.
December 9, Friday, LREC fruit display and tasting is open for the citrus industry from 9:00 AM to noon. Taste fruit at your leisure and discuss low seeded varieties and new varieties with Tracy Kahan and Mikel Roose and pest and disease management issues and horticultural issues with various UC researchers. Following the UC safety guidelines, fruit display tables will be setup outdoors in an open space.
Dr. Gautam is organizing a display of citrus disorders for FFA students from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM.
December 10, Saturday, LREC open from 9 AM to noon for the public to taste 180 varieties of citrus. Master Gardeners will be assisting and providing answers to backyard horticultural questions. Take a bag home of freshly picked varities for $10! Several varieties, Cara Cara, Navels, Mandarins, lemons will be available.
Hope to see you!
- Author: Sandipa Gautam
Monitoring California red scale populations by using pheromone traps and degree days
California red scale is an armored scale that attacks all citrus varieties. It attacks all aerial parts of the tree including leaves, fruits, twigs, and branches by sucking on plant tissue with its long filamentous stylet. Heavy infestations cause leaf yellowing and drop, dieback of twigs, and occasional death of the infested tree. Heavily infested fruits with patches of California red scale may be downgraded in the packinghouse. Growers use monitoring methods, i.e., pheromone trapping, examining fruit, and bin counts (at harvest) for making treatment decisions.
In the San Joaquin Valley, many citrus growers rely on the use of pheromone traps to monitor male-scale flights. Following the biofix (first male flight) degree day units (DD) are used to predict when the next crawler emergence or next-generation flights is occurring. Degree days are heat units accumulated above the lower developmental threshold of an insect and have been long used to monitor the seasonal activity of California red scale populations. Knowing when the most vulnerable life stage of the insect is present helps growers make timed insecticide applications.
Citrus IPM research group led by Dr. Sandipa Gautam at Lindcove Research and Extension Center updates degree day accumulation in the San Joaquin Valley counties. Information for different counties can be found here.
Pheromone traps are used to monitor either weekly changes in male flights or to track densities during flights, especially the fourth flight.
The squares represent 20% of the card – you count what is inside the squares on both sides and multiply by 5 to estimate the total number.
How to use pheromone traps for weekly monitoring male flights?
- Monitor 5 to 6 orchards that have a known population of California red scales every week,so thatyou can determine when flights are occurring and time sprays.
- Change the sticky cards weekly and the pheromone lure caps monthly through October.
- Use two to four pheromone traps per10-acre block;add two traps for each additional10 acres.
How to use trap card information to make management decisions?
- Hang pheromone traps with a fresh lure in early March to detect the biofix (first male flight). Historically, biofix for Kern County occurs around the 1st of March, and biofix for Tulare, Fresno, and Madera Counties occurs around March 15.
- Use the biofix and degree-days to predict when crawler emergence or next flight is occurring. Degree days are accumulated heat units over the lower developmental threshold of California red scale.
- Crawler emergence for first-generation will occur 550 degrees days after biofix.
- Subsequent flights will occur at intervals of 1,100-degree days after the biofix of the first male flight (1,100 DD for 2nd flight; 2,200 DD for 3rd flight; 3,300 DD for 4th flight and 4,400 DD for 5th flight). Subsequent crawler emergence for the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd generation occurs at 550 DD, 1650 DD, and 2750 DD after the biofix.
- Check the Lindcove Research and Extension Center Website for updated information on accumulated degree day
How to use pheromone traps to determine areas of heavy infestation?
- Use 2 to 4 pheromone traps per10-acre block;add 2 traps for each additional10 acres.
- Time placement of traps at the beginning of the biofix for the flight and remove them at the end of each flight and count scales and record the numbers.
In the past, when an average of more than 1,000 scales are trapped during the 4th flight and fruit is infested with scale at harvest, a pesticide application is planned for the next season. However, this threshold of 1,000 scales per flight developed in the 1980s is no longer a stand-alone tool for determining when treatments are necessary. It is critical to use other tactics, such as fruit and twig examination.
Note that pheromone cards are not reliable predictors of scale populations on their own. In all orchards in all growing regions,whether Aphytis wasps are released or not, conduct visual inspections of citrus fruit once a month during August, September, and October to confirm that fruit is free of scale.
Situation 1: Scale densities on traps may be high, but the fruit is free of scale:
- When Movento or Admire (and generics) are used because they remove scale from leaves and fruit but not the wood of the tree.
- Aphytis prefer to attack virgin female scales and the males may escape parasitization, resulting in a high number of male scales on traps.
Situation 2: Very few male scales on traps, but the scale is found on fruit
- When insect growth regulators (buprofezin and pyriproxyfen) are used, the frequently molting male scales are more affected than female scales.
- When mating disruption is used, males cannot find the trap cards so their densities on traps can be very low. A threshold of 50 scales per flight is helpful in determining if mating disruption is effective.
Consult UCIPM guidelines for management options.
- Author: Sandipa Gautam
As of July 2021, I joined the UC Agriculture and Natural Resources as a Cooperative Extension Area Citrus IPM Advisor at Lindcove Research and Extension Center. I am very excited in my new role and for the opportunity to serve San Joaquin Valley that grows ≥ 75% California citrus. My role in this position is to develop research and extension program for citrus pests focused on issues that are important to growers in the San Joaquin Valley.
A good pest management program evolves to respond to factors that influence pest pressure. Change in weather conditions over the last decade, pesticide resistance in citrus thrips and California red scale, potential expansion of Asian citrus psyllid into the San Joaquin Valley and increasing reports of mealybug infestation demand targeted research to solve these issues and an effective extension program to inform stakeholders. With years of experience working with citrus pests and passion to serve the community, I feel prepared for my role as an IPM advisor.
My current research projects focus on citrus thrips resistance monitoring and resistance management, evaluating hydrogel baiting systems for ants, and postharvest system's effect on export concern pests (bean thrips, mites, California red scale and Fuller rose beetle). Extension activities include development and delivery of educational programs on citrus pests. Future research projects will be designed to address SJV grower's pest management needs.
I can be reached at 559-592-2408 (ext. 1156) and sangautam@ucanr.edu. Follow me on twitter @Sandipa_gautam (UCANR Citrus IPM) for news on Citrus IPM events. I look forward to interacting with you!