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Relationship of navel orangeworm moths to hard shell and soft shell almonds

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Authors

Philip S. Crane, California State Department of Agriculture, Sacramento
F. M. Summers, University of California, Davis.

Publication Information

California Agriculture 25(1):8-9.

Published January 01, 1971

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Abstract

THERE ARE SEVERAL severe bottle-necks in the search for agricultural chemicals (toxicants, sterilants or repellents) to control navel orangeworm infestations in almond orchards. One is that the use of experimental or unregistered pesticides jeopardizes the sale of crops from test plots. Another concerns the scarcity of knowledge about the flights of moths within or between orchards and within entire communities. The tools to do this kind of assessment work are still crude and the manpower requirement is high. Individuals and various small research teams working in California have accumulated a large amount of information about this tenacious pest, but an economic control method for orchard infestations has not yet been determined.

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Relationship of navel orangeworm moths to hard shell and soft shell almonds

Philip S. Crane, F. M. Summers
Webmaster Email: bjnoel@ucanr.edu

Relationship of navel orangeworm moths to hard shell and soft shell almonds

Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article
Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article

Authors

Philip S. Crane, California State Department of Agriculture, Sacramento
F. M. Summers, University of California, Davis.

Publication Information

California Agriculture 25(1):8-9.

Published January 01, 1971

PDF  |  Citation  |  Permissions

Author Affiliations show

Abstract

THERE ARE SEVERAL severe bottle-necks in the search for agricultural chemicals (toxicants, sterilants or repellents) to control navel orangeworm infestations in almond orchards. One is that the use of experimental or unregistered pesticides jeopardizes the sale of crops from test plots. Another concerns the scarcity of knowledge about the flights of moths within or between orchards and within entire communities. The tools to do this kind of assessment work are still crude and the manpower requirement is high. Individuals and various small research teams working in California have accumulated a large amount of information about this tenacious pest, but an economic control method for orchard infestations has not yet been determined.

Full text

Full text is available in PDF.

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