Successful IPM begins with correct identification of the pest. Only then can a selection of appropriate IPM methods and materials be made.

The Integrated Pest Management (IPM) project is a pesticide user public education and awareness program. It is in partnership with the Fresno Metropolitan Flood Control District, UC Master Gardeners of Fresno County.
Welcome to UC IPM's Urban & Community Webinar Series!
Join us at noon on the third Thursday of every month to learn about pest identification, prevention, and management around the home, garden, and landscape.
This series is free and open to the public but advance registration is required. Please share with others who may be interested. No continuing education units (CEUs) are available to licensed professionals. Master Gardeners should check with their program coordinator about credits.
Quick Tip Cards
Quick Tip cards may be accessed at UC IPM Online. Choose from Ants, Aphids, Fleas, Spider Mites, Powdery Mildew, Pesticides: Safe and Effective Use in the Home and Landscape, Garden Chemicals: Safe Use and Disposal and more.

Quick Tips Library in English
Notas Breves en Español
Candle Wax On Grapevine?
Author: Richard Hardwick
Author: Barbara Miller

Ever see a white, cottony looking, waxy mess on the trunk of your grapevines? And other locations? No, it’s not candle wax.

This sticky, cottony mess is the secretion of a waxy material by grapevine mealybugs. Yes, these vine mealybugs are similar to the mealybugs that sometimes affect your indoor and outdoor house plants. Mealybugs belong to the Class Insecta, Family Pseudcoccidae. The species scientific name for the vine mealybug is Planococcus ficus.
When you look closely at the above photo, you will see several white/gray wax-covered adult mealybugs along with the wax they leave on themselves, leaves, stems, trunks and fruit on grapevines. The mealybugs also excrete a sticky honeydew which sometimes causes black sooty mold to grow on top of the honey dew. This honeydew will attract ants. In the pictures above and below, the mealybugs were on the trunk of a grape vine with honeydew dripping onto the surrounding iris and hollyhock garden.

When temperatures are warm in the spring, vine mealybug populations increase and become more visible as they move from the roots or trunk to other parts of the plant. By late spring and summer, vine mealybugs are found on most parts of the vine.
Here are three resources that will provide you with guidance on dealing with mealybugs:
Vine Mealybug / Grape / Agriculture for the various biological and cultural control methods to reduce the problems the vine mealybugs will cause.
Mealybugs Management Guidelines--UC IPM and Identifying Mealybugs - Grape to help identify different species of mealybugs and see their life cycles.
Mealybugs--UC IPM for further information about pests in gardens and landscapes and how to control them. Additional species of mealybugs will infest other plants and can include your outdoor and/or indoor plants.
Friend or Foe? Bee or Fly?

This insect's common names are hover fly, flower fly or syrphid fly. It belongs to Class Insecta, Order Diptera, Family Syrphidae. The adult is a pollinator and while in the larval stage, will consume harmful insects (e.g. aphids and mealybugs). They are your friends. For more info, see

Listen as Millions of Monarch Butterflies Make One of the Rarest Sounds on Earth - Click on link/video below



https://entomologytoday.org/2015/08/17/mosquito-hawk-skeeter-eater-giant-mosquito-no-no-and-no/
Lace Wing (Class Insecta, Order Neuroptera)

Do not squish the lace wing in any of its life cycle stages. It is a beneficial insect which attacks aphids and other harmful insects. Do not mistake the larva for a harmful "bug." For further information read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysopidae and http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/NE/green_lacewing.html If you click on the 4 individual photos at the IPM.ucanr website, you will see how the eggs are attached to vegetation and see the larva attacking an aphid. But you will have to go to the IPM.ucanr website to see these activities.
The Bees Are Swarming.

It was brought to our attention by MG Barbara Miller that honey bees have started to swarm. She had a swarm enter her yard recently. Swarming is a natural process in the life of a honey bee colony. Swarming occurs when a large group of honey bees leaves an established colony and flies off to establish a new colony, essentially creating two from one. Swarming is a natural method of propagation that occurs in response to crowding within the colony. Swarming usually occurs in late spring and early summer and begins in the warmer hours of the day. Swarming is common and not dangerous.
For more information, please see http://ipm.ucanr.edu/IPMPROJECT/2012/honey-bees_2012.html
Aphids
The Aphids are back. Class Insecta, Order Hemiptera
Aphids seem to find their way into every garden. They are small, soft-bodied insects that feed by sucking the nutrient-rich liquids out of plants. In large numbers, they can weaken plants significantly, harming flowers and fruit. Aphids multiply quickly, so it’s important to get them under control before reproduction starts. Many generations can occur in one season.
Are Foggers Effective?

Foggers can be used effectively to kill pests that are flying around or resting on surfaces, like flies, but there are better long-term and more effective ways to manage these pests. Unfortunately, foggers are rarely effective for control of crawling insects like cockroaches, fleas, and bed bugs that can easily hide in crevices or beneath household items, escaping direct exposure. For best results, the active ingredients in these products must make contact with the pests. Insects that spend most of their time hiding will not be significantly affected by insect foggers. Even a small piece of fabric may be enough to protect bed bugs from the pesticide fog created by these products.
Improper Use Can Cause Injuries
Fogger labels list the size of the space they are intended to treat but according to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), overuse of foggers is common. Not only does overuse increase insecticide residue and exposure risk in the area, but the propellent used in foggers is flammable! Explosions can occur if pilot lights are not extinguished before use as instructed by the label.
For Safety, Follow the Label!
Baby It's Cold Outside

Watch for these intruders trying to come into your warm house from your garden.
To identify and eradicate this harmful insect, see
http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/GARDEN/VEGES/PESTS/stinkbug.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_marmorated_stink_bug
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentatomidae
Healthier Environment

University of California Master Gardeners preserve and encourage healthy environments with sustainable gardening practices, green waste reduction, and water conservation. UC Master Gardeners prevent, detect, and manage invasive and endemic species by educating communities about invasive species and safe alternatives.Below are just a few examples of the many outstanding projects developed by UC Master Gardeners throughout the state. Visit your local program website for a full listing of projects in your county.
Healthier Environment/click to learn more

A Master Gardener was having issues with her apple tree. On previous years she was able to harvest bountiful bushels of delicious juicy apples from her tree from which she made fabulous deserts. One of her pleasures as she strolled through her garden in the morning was to reach up and pluck an apple from the tree and eat it while inspecting her garden. On one particular morning as she reached up to pick an apple she noticed it had a brown spot on it. It seemed that every apple she picked had the same ugly brown spot on it. She brought it to her husband’s attention, and, like George Washington, her husband was ready to chop down that tree.