- Author: Elizabeth E Grafton-Cardwell
Staff Research Assistant John Bash from the Citrus Clonal Protection Program (CCPP) at UC Riverside directs the fall budwood cut at the Lindcove Research and Extension Center. The citrus trees that provide the budwood are grown inside Lindcove’s protective screened buildings and distributed from there to the nursery industry. The screening prevents insect vectors such as aphids and psyllids from reaching the trees and potentially infecting them with diseases. The CCPP screenhouse trees are tested several times per year to ensure they are free of all known citrus diseases. Raul Gonzalez, a retired Lindcove SRA, still enjoys assisting with the budwood cuts after 38 years of service to the University of California.
- Posted By: Elizabeth E Grafton-Cardwell
- Written by: Mikeal Roose
UC Riverside researchers Mikeal Roose and Tracy Kahn are evaluating seed content in Valencia oranges as part of a mutation breeding project to find new cultivars with lower seed content. Budwood of the existing Olinda Valencia cultivar was irradiated to induce mutations and trees were then propagated from the treated buds. The resulting trees are grown at Lindcove Research and Extension Center and then fruit from each tree are cut to determine seed content. Trees that produce many fruit with few or no seeds will be selected and a pathogen-free budsource will be established by the Citrus Clonal Protection Program. This budsource will then be used to propagate trees for replicated trials at Lindcove and elsewhere in California.
- Posted By: Elizabeth E Grafton-Cardwell
- Written by: T. Kapaun and B. Grafton-Cardwell
The Citrus IPM research team at Lindcove REC tests the efficacy of pesticides and provides recommendations to pest control advisers on strategies for managing citrus pests in the San Joaquin Valley. A long, wet spring has resulted in exceptionally high citricola scale populations this summer, and control is expected to be difficult due to the insect’s known resistance to organophosphates. Heavy infestations of citricola can dramatically limit fruit set. Three experimental insecticides are currently being tested for effectiveness and possible registration, as well as a dozen or more registered pesticides. The goals of the citricola trials are to find insecticides that achieve at least two years of control between sprays and that have minimal impact on natural enemies that help to control citricola scale and other pests. Results of these and other trials are published annually in the journal Arthropod Management Tests. Informative pest-specific information is available online at http://ucanr.org/sites/KACCitrusEntomology/
- Author: Elizabeth E Grafton-Cardwell
On July 27, Dr. Beth Grafton-Cardwell held an earwig field day at Lindcove featuring the work of visiting Spanish student Carla Romeu Dalmau. Earwigs can be a pest of new citrus plantings when they feed on the flush growth and occasionally damage citrus fruit just after petal fall. Carla has shown that the flush damage occurs in the spring but not the summer and that adults are efficient predators of various insect pests including California red scales, aphids and collembola. Thus, they are not always a pest but sometimes a beneficial. While Carla is heading back to Spain soon, the Grafton-Cardwell research team will continue to study earwigs and develop management tools.
- Author: Elizabeth E Grafton-Cardwell
Dr. Beth Grafton-Cardwell, with the help of assistants Sara, Jennifer and Jamie, is releasing earwigs into the blue arena surrounding this young citrus tree. The purpose of the release is to study the level of damage earwigs cause to young citrus at various times of the year.