- Author: Ben Faber
With all the rain last year, even extending into August and now with the rains since December there is a lot of natural ground cover growing, When it gets out of hand, we call it weedy. It might still serve the purpose of protecting the ground from erosion, but it can become an impenetrable mess and if allowed to go into summer, a major fire hazard. In the case of some young orchard, the malva and mustard is bigger than the trees themselves. Getting control of them before they get woody and go to seed is easier earlier than later. So it's time to do something about them if you haven't done so already.
A common practice on flat ground is to mow the middles and then weed whack/whip the tree row up to and around the tree trunk. In the case of trees that have their canopies down to the ground or near the ground or that have created a thick leaf mulch, there's not usually much weedy growth near the trunk. Then weed whacking around the canopy is not much of a problem. If on a slope like most avocados, it's a big, expensive, laborious, hot, sweaty, arduous process of weed whacking. Just waiting long enough for the leaf mulch to create a barrier to weed growth and for the canopies to grow out to rob the sun from the surface undergrowth.
In young trees without a large canopy, it can be a really difficult process of getting those weeds near the trunk. Care must be taken to avoid damage to the trunk. In a couple of recent examples, weed whacking got right up and on the trunks and significant damage was done to the trees. When a wound occurs in any tree, a process kicks in to generate tissue to cover the wound, much like what happens with humans and wound cuts. There's a scar left, but it heals over. If the wound is too large, many trees cant cover the woody tissue fast enough. The wood beneath the cambium ( the green tissue below the bark) is prone to fungal infection and eventually the fungus eats away at the interior of the tree. If the wound is large enough and girdles the tree, all the nutrients from the leaves feeding the roots is cut off. The photosynthate sugars that keep the roots functioning, and the roots stop doing what roots do. This is absolutely true is citrus and most other orchard tree crops. But not avocado.
When making a cross section of most trees, it's possible to see the growth rings – the growth increments that appear each year. The tree starts and stops growth each year and it's possible to clearly identified in what year there was more or less growth. In long lived trees like redwood, it's possible to identify years when certain events happened – the year of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, for example. This growth habit is called ring porous.
In the case of avocado, it has a growth habit called diffuse porous. There is growth throughout the year and the rings are nor clearly delineated, if at all. It's because of this possible active growth occurring, that the avocado can often cover over damage that is quite extensive. After a fire, given time, mature avocado trees can summon up energy to recover to a great extent. It's not so true of young trees, however. Avocados still have a greater regenerative capacity than a lemon tree, and if the damage is to just one side of the tree, there's a very good chance of recovery.
But these young tree are severely impaired. They do have a chance of recovery, but the damage is extensive and the trunk is fully girdled. Only time will tell if they do recover. If the tree were only a year old, it would be a good idea to pull them and start over. But a number of these trees are three years old and have had a lot of investment in them besides their initial nursery cost – pruning, weeding, irrigation, fertilization, etc. It is heart breaking to see damage like this after so much attention has been paid to them.
And the best thing is to let the tree recover on its own. Use of pruning paint actually impairs tissue regeneration. The grower asked if a kaolin protectant like Surround might be used to provide some sun protection. Since that breathes, it might be a good idea. It might also be a good idea to apply some trunk wraps. These were taken off in order to prevent earwig and snail harbor which can cause significant damage to young trees. But they also provide protection from overly aggressive weed whackers. It is always a compromise when making these decisions.
- Author: Ben Faber
So I've gotten a few calls lately about this vine with a big green pod that is growing in lemon trees. What is done with it and how do you get rid of it?
Araujia sericifera, cruel vine, moth plant, bladderflower is an escaped ornamental that has become an invasive weed in California. Yes, a pretty vine brought into the garden – “poor man's stephanotis” - and it's gotten out of the garden into southern California. It's in the hills, in abandoned orchards, on backyard fences and when it gets into a lemon tree, it takes some effort to remove it before the seeds spread to other trees and beyond.
Bladderflower is a perennial vine that is very vigorous where it gets summer water. It is a common weed in citrus groves, where it would enshroud & smother entire trees if not controlled. Stems are tough and ropy, leaves thick & slightly spongy. Sap is milky white, moderately poisonous & causes skin irritation. It flowers Aug-Oct and the seed pods are obvious later in the fall. The flowers have a pleasant fragrance like jasmine. The reason for gardeners planting it. Plus it grows fast in our environment.
The plump pods produce copious seeds when ripe. The fruit splits down one side and turns itself inside out. The numerous, loosely attached seeds parachute away on silky hairs, dispersed by the wind – on to the next tree or fence.
So the vine is entrained in the tree canopy so you cant spray an herbicide. To get rid of it, it's important to get down to the base of the tree and cut it out at ground level, removing as much of the root as possible. It still can regenerate, so it will be necessary to monitor the site, removing new growth as it might happen. Be sure to use hand protection because many people are allergic to the sap. Just cutting the vine at its base is sufficient to kill it. Removing the rest of the vine is necessary if there are pods, in order to prevent them going to seed.
The upside of the plant aside from the fragrant flowers is that it is an alternative food source for monarch butterfly caterpillars.
Calfflora shows cruel vine spread mostly along the coast south of San Luis Obispo, but it has the potential to spread thoguhout much of California. Currently, in the US, it is only found in California and Georgia. It is in New Zealand and Australia.
Calflora Description and Distribution of Bladderflower
USDA Description of Plant as attachment below:
Araujia sericifera WRA
- Author: Ben Faber
Who says you can't know all those wild things growing in the field you didn't put there? Here's a chance to learn what they are for cheap. UC Publications is having a book sale and they are a deal until February 14.
Weed Control in Natural Areas in the Western United States
This is the first comprehensive book to focus on control options for invasive plants in natural areas. Covers control methods for 340 species in 13 western states, covering rangelands, grasslands, pastures, riparian and aquatic areas.
Publication Number:: 3547
Availability:
Available
$37.00
$27.75
Weed Pest Identification and Monitoring Cards
Based on the bestselling Weeds of California and Other Western States; this is the perfect pocket-sized companion for anyone working in the field.
Publication Number:: 3541
Availability:
Available
$25.00
$18.75
Weeds of California and Other Western States
This easy-to-use 2-volume set is the most comprehensive guide available. Includes a CD of every photograph in the book; perfect for presentations.
Publication Number:: 3488
Availability:
Available
$65.00
$45.50
|
- Author: Cheryl Wilen
IPM Natural Resources Extension Coordinator
Endemic and Invasive Pests and Diseases Strategic Initiative Leader
UC Statewide IPM Program & UCCE- You need to get a Remote Pilot Airman Certificate (FAA Part 107) if you are going to do anything commercial with it. That includes even if you are using it on a job where you will not be paid.
- You can use it for scouting but you can't fly it over people (unless you get a waiver). You also always have to have it in your or an assistant's (the spotter with radio communication) line of sight.
- Even if you have a drone that is capable of doing a spray application, the Dept. of Pesticide Regulation currently requires that the drone pilot have an Airman's Certificate (Pilot's license). This is addition to the Pest Control Aircraft Pilot Certificate from DPR. However, things may change in 2018. See pages 3-47 to 3-52 in http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/enforce/compend/vol_1/entirerep.pdf
2017 The Regents of the University of California. All Rights Reserved
/span>
- Author: Patrick Moran
Editor: Guy B Kyser
The giant invasive grass arundo (Arundo donax), one of the weeds targeted under the USDA-ARS-funded Delta Region Areawide Aquatic Weed Project (DRAAWP), has been re-acquainted with one of its natural enemies imported from arundo's native range. A tiny insect called the arundo armored scale (Rhizaspidiotus donacis) has been successfully released in the Sacramento River watershed and in the Delta.
Arundo forms dense stands across at least 10,000 acres in California, and over 100,000 acres in other arid riparian areas such as the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas and Mexico. Other control methods such as herbicide application, mechanical removal, mowing or burning have been used to reduce arundo populations in California, costing tens of millions of dollars. However, arundo is a tough plant and takes advantage of human disturbance and fire in riparian habitats along creeks, sloughs, rivers and reservoirs. Arundo populations in California thus exceed the capacity of these other control methods. In the absence of control, arundo consumes and wastes scarce water – a single plant can consume as much water as corn when growing in moist soil under hot, sunny conditions. Dense arundo stands block access to water for irrigation and recreation, and also obstruct flood control structures such as drainage ditches. Arundo also displaces native plants and animals and alters geomorphology and water flow dynamics in riparian habitats in ways that make it difficult for the natives to come back even if the arundo is controlled.
Biological control of invasive weeds focuses on the characterization, release and evaluation of insects (or plant pathogens) from the weed's native range into areas where the weed is non-native. The arundo armored scale was collected originally in southern France, Spain, and Italy. Studies by Spanish collaborators showed that, even in its native range with its own natural enemies, the arundo armored scale reduces shoot growth and rhizome size by 50%.
Biological control agents undergo rigorous testing to ensure they are not a threat to native plants or crops. After a permit review process, the USDA granted a permit for field release of arundo armored scale in 2010. (This is one of two insects that have been released for biological control of arundo in North America.) Since 2011, this biological control agent has been released in the Lower Rio Grande Basin. Initial releases of this agent in California began in 2014, and it was found that the scale insect had become established at one site in the northern Sacramento Valley by November of that year.
Armored scales are small insects that spend most of their lives in an immobile state, covered by their waxy secretions (‘armor'). Adult females produce ‘crawlers' that disperse locally (typically just a few feet) to find new buds coming up from the arundo rhizomes or lateral shoot buds above ground. The crawlers then lose their legs and antennae and insert their stylet-like mouthparts into the arundo tissue to feed on the fluids in the plant's vascular system. Crawlers molt to a second immature phase, and about six to eight weeks later, short-lived adult males emerge from their armor and mate with the immobile adult females. The females continue to feed and slowly develop embryos. A new generation of crawlers then emerges from the females. The life cycle takes four to six months.
Top row, left to right: Tiny (0.5 mm) crawlers emerge from females and settle on rhizomes or lateral shoots. Second-instar immature scales continue to feed and expand. Winged adult males emerge from their oyster-like scale covering. Females (armored scale cover removed) are shriveled and skinny right after molting. Mature females are plump and turn a darker color when they are full of crawlers ready to emerge. Bottom row, left to right: Adult females form aggregations on arundo rhizomes and shoots. The presence of armored scale populations causes shoot distortion and reduces both shoot growth and rhizome size.
In 2015, we tested a new release technique using arundo ‘microplants'. We soaked arundo shoot fragments in water for one month, then planted them in pots where they produced new shoot buds and roots. Armored scale crawlers were released onto the microplants. After about six months, we planted the infested microplants at field sites in the Delta – Andrus Island on the Sacramento River, and at Big Break near Oakley – and along Stony Creek in Glenn and Butte Counties north of the Delta. We established the microplants adjacent to large arundo shoots, and we cut off some of the established shoots to encourage production of new rhizome buds and lateral shoots. We watered the microplants as needed to keep them alive for about 6 months.
Left to right: Microplant with gelatin capsules used to isolate scale crawlers from females (capsules had been opened and crawlers poured onto the base of the plant). Greenhouse bench with arundo microplants. Field plot with arundo shoots cut back to promote new shoot and rhizome growth. Base of an arundo shoot at the field site (arrow indicates location of adult female scales that developed from crawlers that had previously came out of the females on the microplants.
Almost one year after planting, in November 2016, we sampled arundo rhizomes and shoots from the areas where the now-dead microplants were placed. At the Sacramento River site, 150 females were found, and at a site on Stony Creek in Butte County, 72 females were found. The females were placed in gelatin capsules to capture crawlers. A total of 1,668 crawlers emerged by early January 2017. Since there are still many more arundo shoots around the microplant sites, these results indicate that the arundo armored scale has established reproductive populations at three sites in California. This is the first establishment of this biocontrol agent in the state. Additional releases are planned throughout the Delta and surrounding watersheds. Along with the arundo wasp (Tetramesa romana), the arundo armored scale is expected to significantly reduce the potential for arundo to grow, disperse and form damaging populations that threaten water resources.
This work is conducted under the USDA-ARS-funded Delta Region Areawide Aquatic Weed Project (DRAAWP). This portion of the project is led by Dr. Patrick Moran (Patrick.Moran@ars.usda.gov) of the USDA-ARS Exotic and Invasive Weeds Research Unit, Albany, CA. Dr. Moran is working with a postdoctoral researcher, Dr. Ellyn Bitume (Ellyn.Bitume@ars.usda.gov), on this project. Contact us if you have questions. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Conservancy (Beckye Stanton) is collaborating with USDA-ARS to identify field sites in the Delta, connect with landowners, and integrate biological control with their chemical arundo control program. Dr. Moran cooperates with landowners and local Reclamation Districts to obtain access to field sites.