Gardening

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Mature dallisgrass plant, Paspalum dilatatum. [Credit: K Windbiel-Rojas]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Oh Dallisgrass

October 4, 2022
By Lauren Fordyce
Knowing what weedy grass you have in your lawn or landscape is very important in being able to properly control it. Dallisgrass is a common perennial weed that is easily identified and grows in uneven clumps in lawns and turf.
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A black-tailed jackrabbit, also known as a hare. [Credit: US Fish and Wildlife Service]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Bad Bunnies

October 4, 2022
By Belinda Messenger-Sikes, Lauren Fordyce
Many people think wild rabbits hopping around are adorablethere's even an international rabbit day celebrating wild and domestic rabbitsbut they're less welcome when they're eating your carefully tended garden. Wild rabbits in California can devour your garden vegetables, just like Peter Cottontail.
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Sunburned bell pepper with a necrotic spot
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

What are Abiotic Plant Disorders?

October 3, 2022
By Lauren Fordyce, Belinda Messenger-Sikes
Abiotic plant disorders are generally caused by environmental conditions, rather than microorganisms. They are sometimes called noninfectious diseases. Abiotic disorders can develop if a plant's needs are not being met.
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Features of brown marmorated stink bugs. [Credit: Steve Jacobs, PSU]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Invasive Pest Spotlight: Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

September 26, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas
The invasive pest spotlight focuses on emerging or potential invasive pests in California. In this issue we are covering the brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB). Brown marmorated stink bug facts BMSB can cause severe crop and garden losses and become a nuisance in and around homes and other buildings.
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A drought-tolerant garden bed of California poppies, Ceanothus, and Watsonia. Photo by Tina Saravia, UC ANR.
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Drought or Disease?

September 26, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas, Belinda Messenger-Sikes
With ongoing drought and local water restrictions in place in many areas of California, you may start to see landscape plants suffering from stress caused by a lack of water, calledwater stress. Water-stressed plants can have symptoms that resemble diseases caused by plant pathogens.
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Jumping spider eating a fly. [Credit: Jack Kelly Clark]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Webinars: Spiders, Pesticides and Water!

August 11, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas
Are you concerned about pesticides in our waterways? Join us on August 18, 2022 at noon for UC IPM's free monthly webinar to learn how to keep surface water clean by reducing pesticide use and runoff.
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Thinning canopy is an early sign of Bot canker. [Credit: J. Downer]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Bot Canker: Have You Heard of It?

July 28, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas
Ever heard of Bot canker? "Bot" stands for Botryosphaeria which is a plant disease that results in cankers of trees and other woody plants. This fungal disease can be worse under drought conditions when trees are stressed.
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Leaves of a river red gum eucalyptus tree covered with redgum lerp psyllids. The white growths are the “lerp” produced by the immature (nymph) stage of the insect. [Credit: Jack Kelly Clark]
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Redgum Lerp Psyllid Resource Updated

July 25, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas
If you have eucalyptus trees, you might have noticed white, crusty growth on the leaves. Or maybe you saw a sticky, blackened mess of fallen leaves under a eucalyptus tree. These are signs of the redgum lerp psyllid, one of the most common psyllid pests that damages eucalyptus trees in California.
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Figure. 1. Several small three-lined cockroaches with black and brown stripes.
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Three-lined Cockroach: an Introduced Nuisance Pest in California

July 23, 2022
By Belinda Messenger-Sikes
[Originally published in the Summer 2022 issue of the UC IPM Green Bulletin] The three-lined cockroach, Luridiblatta trivittata, (Figure 1) is the smallest cockroach species in California, with adults averaging only 57 mm in length.
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Fig 1 Adult female of Polyhagous shot hole borer
Pests in the Urban Landscape: Article

Invasive Shothole Borers Threaten California’s Urban Forests

July 15, 2022
By Karey Windbiel-Rojas, Beatriz E Nobua Behrmann
When tiny tree-killing beetles first arrived in Southern California several years ago and began destroying urban and riparian forests, they raised widespread concerns among both tree experts and affected communities.
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