- Author: Mark Bolda
The pictures below are of a species of sap feeding beetles (Family Nitidulidae) found in one section of a local strawberry field. This case of these insects is pretty interesting simply because they are so uncommon to find in Watsonville.
Conditions of discovery are the following. The location is a beautiful strawberry field full of big fruit, bordered by apples and blackberries. It is only the five or six rows bordering the apples and blackberries that have these sap beetles.
The beetles occur in groups of four to six mostly on the undersides of the fruit and excavate holes there, in which several beetles at a time gather. One characteristic of infested fruits is that they are quite mature or even over ripe, which is in keeping with the host and feeding preferences of this family of insects.
As one can see from the first two photos below, distinguishing characteristics of sap beetles are the club shaped antennae, and shortened elytra exposing in this case three abdominal segments.
The solution to this problem is quite simple. One would want to remove and discard affected fruit from the field, and if very concerned, one could even do a cover spray with an insecticide of the infested rows- it's really not necessary to do the whole field. Additionally, I have a feeling some of this is related to the moist weather we have had over the past few weeks, so as we move into the drier summer period it's quite probable that these insects will simply go away on their own.
I mention the use of pesticide for management of sap beetles in this article. Before using these products, check with your local Agricultural Commissioner's Office and consult the product label for current status of product registration, restrictions, and use information.
- Author: Mark Bolda
Some points to ponder on a rainy few days regarding phosphorous fertility in strawberries.
Since the work described below was conducted both years in a soil of or above 80 ppm phosphorous, we can’t define where the agronomic threshold for crop response from additional phosphorous lies and subsequently can’t publish in a peer reviewed journal. Subsequently this is not meant to be a guide for phosphorous fertility in California strawberries. Nevertheless, since many of the soils we farm are well within the concentrations of P described, this work could be instructive to those thinking about soil fertility in strawberries.
Introduction: There is a significant body of work in lettuce and several other vegetable crops on the California Central which finds that above a certain soil test threshold concentration there is no longer any plant response to any added phosphorous (P). The following two year study was designed to approach the hypothesis that this also holds true for strawberries.
Materials and Methods:
Year 1 (2008-2009): The field for the study in year one was located south of Salinas and had the following characteristics:
OM |
Sand |
Silt |
Clay |
PPM Olsen P |
2.5% |
49 |
26 |
25 |
90 |
The area for experiment had 24-0-15 added on 9/23/08 at the rate of 362 lb/A applied. Plots to contain phosphorous had super phosphate applied to them at the rate of 48 lb P/A.
Supplemental fertilizer applications to trial plots through the season were in total the equivalent of 54.7 lb N, 60 lb P, and 60 lb K and were achieved with applications of 3-18-18, 20-20-20, and ammonium sulfate.
Yield data for marketable and cull fruit was taken once a week beginning April 7 and ending September 16. As soil phosphorous levels do not change rapidly even in the presence of a crop, soil data for phosphorous concentration was taken once from the field before trial placement and then on August 24, 2009, and plant tissue data consisting of petioles and blades was taken once a month beginning in January, 2009.
Year 2 (2009-2010):
Field for year 2 was near to the field for year 1, so initial soil characteristics were similar.
The area for the experiment had 325 lb/A of 27-0-18 applied to the plots free of phosphorous addition and 24-8-18 at an equivalent rate to the above applied to plots with phosphorous. The result for pre-plant fertilizer addition then was 78 lb N, 26 lb P, and 49 lb K applied to phosphorous addition plots and the same amount of nitrogen and potassium applied to plots without added phosphorous.
Supplemental fertilizer applications to trial plots through the beginning of September were in total the equivalent of 172 lb N, 0 lb P and 12 lb K and were achieved with applications of CN9, 0-0-25, and UN32.
Yield data for marketable and cull fruit was taken once a week beginning April 30 and ending September 2. Soil data was taken once a month starting in October, 2009 and no samples taken in June or July of 2010. Plant tissue data consisting of whole leaf blade nutrient concentrations was taken April, May, August and September.
Results- Year 1
Fruit Yield: There were no significant differences in marketable fruit yield or number in any month sampled, nor were there any significant differences in yields and numbers of cull fruit.
Blade and petiole information given below is a summary of the data sampled over the course of the first year of this study. There are no significant differences by date between plots with P added and those with no P added.
Petioles by sampling date
|
NO3 ppm |
PO4 ppm |
%K |
3/2/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
2295 |
2000 |
2.45 |
No P added |
2310 |
2035 |
2.55 |
5/1/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
2576 |
1830 |
2.71 |
No P added |
2692 |
1690 |
2.56 |
8/24/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
1237.5 |
1657.5 |
2.01 |
No P added |
1137.5 |
1690.0 |
1.89 |
Blades by sampling date
|
%N |
%P |
%K |
1/13/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
3.52 |
0.74 |
2.31 |
No P added |
3.54 |
0.64 |
2.21 |
3/2/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
3.62 |
0.84 |
2.06 |
No P added |
3.67 |
0.89 |
2.10 |
5/1/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
2.87 |
0.41 |
1.71 |
No P added |
2.90 |
0.39 |
1.81 |
8/24/2009 |
|
|
|
P added |
2.64 |
0.36 |
1.76 |
No P added |
2.63 |
0.35 |
1.69 |
Field soil phosphorous was 90 ppm as per Olsen’s P before trial placement and average readings were 85 ppm from plots with additional phosphorous added, and 87 ppm from plots where no phosphorous was added. These readings are not significantly different from one another.
Results- Year 2
Fruit yield: There were no significant differences in marketable fruit yield or number in any month sampled, nor were there any significant differences in total yield of cull fruit or number.
Blade and soil nutrient information given below is a summary of the data sampled over the course of the second year of this study. Unless indicated so, there are no significant differences between plots with P added and those with no P added by date.
Blades by sampling date
|
%N |
%P |
%K |
4/8/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
2.58 |
0.56 |
1.6 |
No P added |
2.62 |
0.55 |
1.6 |
5/27/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
2.72 |
0.36 |
1.56 |
No P added |
2.74 |
0.37 |
1.54 |
8/10/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
2.46 |
0.34 |
1.38 |
No P added |
2.50 |
0.34 |
1.41 |
Soil by sampling date
|
NO3 ppm |
Olsen P |
K ppm |
4/8/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
16.35 |
85 |
179.3 |
No P added |
16.15 |
83 |
175.8 |
5/27/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
10.50 |
86 |
170.3 |
No P added |
3.51 |
76 * |
182.9 |
8/10/2010 |
|
|
|
P added |
9.73 |
84 |
106.4 |
No P added |
9.91 |
82 |
125.5 |
* Significantly differs (P=0.05, Student Newman Kuels)
Comments and Discussion: It is clear that the addition of phosphorous in this study covering two years of distinct strawberry crops did not result in yield differences, nor in plant tissue concentrations.
That soil P values did not decline very much, if at all, in both years should not be surprising. For one, the soil test value is a measure of the soil P equilibrium, which means that when plants remove P from the soil solution, additional P comes into the solution from precipitated forms. In other words, a soil with a high P test like the one in these tests simply backfills what is taken up by the plant from its ample reserve. Secondly, according to sampling done by Tim Hartz and his lab over the past few years, we have no indication that strawberries are removing more than 40 lb P per acre per season, meaning that soil test P would not decline more than 15 ppm even if no more P were to come into solution as described above. It simply will not fall very much.
Many thanks to Tim Hartz at UC Davis and the DANR Analytical Laboratory at Davis for their dedicated assistance with this work.
Finally, I want to thank the grower who collaborated with me on this work for two years. You know who you are, and you helped me a lot- I wouldn’t have been able to even think about doing this study if you hadn’t helped me so much. Thank you!
- Author: Mark Bolda
The Watsonville Strawberry Pomology Field Day is planned for Tuesday, May 1:
http://cesantacruz.ucdavis.edu/?calitem=159296&g=16662
Featured will be an overview of short day and day neutral strawberry varieties, soil fumigation, entomology and current pest management issues.
It's always been a great meeting, one probably doesn't want to miss this.
- Author: Mark Bolda
I have an update on the strawberry field described in the January 6 post of this blog suffering extensive salt damage .
As you may recall, the determination on finding all of that salt damage was to immediately overhead irrigate to wash the accumulated salts away from the plant roots, and the grower did indeed do that already on the next day as shown in the first photo below.
As the reader can see from the second and third photos below, the recovery of this field is now near complete. The plants are large, green with flower and fruit formation just beginning. While the field seems to be have been set back some on the production cycle from the injury caused by salt, there is no doubt that the situation is a much happier one right now than in January, with nary a sign of salt burn anywhere and plants well into recovery.
Three soil samples taken from the field April 24, 2012 gave salinity at 1.3 dS/m, 1.5 dS/M and 2.3 dS/M, giving the impression that much of the salt from January had been now leached out.
- Author: Mark Bolda
Mark Bolda, Laura Tourte, Rich De Moura and Karen Klonsky
of University of California Cooperative Extension have authored "Sample Costs to Produce Second Year Strawberries" which is now posted at:
http://coststudies.ucdavis.edu/files/Strawberry2ndYrCC2011.pdf
Cultivation of second year strawberries (also known as "cut backs" or "renovations" by some) is a significant part of the strawberry industry on the Central Coast, currently covering some 15% of the total acreage. This study, which took several months of research and a raft of interviews with local strawberry growers (thank you all!), is a thorough examination of this cultural method, its costs and returns. For growers currently growing or considering embarking on the production of second year strawberries, "Sample Costs to Produce Second Year Strawberries" is going to be a really valuable piece of literature.