Nursery and Landscape Report for August 21, 2009

Environment Canada is calling for hot, humid weather to continue.  There is a chance of showers in some areas today but it should be partly sunny and warm.  High¡¯s expected to be in the range of 26-29oC.  Winds will be out of the SW today, 20-30 km/hr.  Saturday and Sunday are expected to be a little cooler.

Growing Degree Day summaries are from Environment Canada and are base temperature 10oC (August 18).

Ottawa:  731 Peterborough:  792 Barrie:  722 Hamilton:    844
Waterloo:  818 London:  903 Windsor:   1135

The Pesticides Act has been amended by the Cosmetic Pesticides Ban Act, 2008 and Ontario Regulation 63/09 that have taken effect on April 22, 2009.  For more information on the legislation call the Ministry of Environment information line at: 1-800-565-4923 or see the Ministry of the Environment¡¯s website at  http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/en/land/pesticides/index.php

PLEASE NOTE: The Following Pesticide Recommendations Are Meant for Exception Uses (e.g. agriculture) under the Cosmetic Pesticide Ban unless the active ingredient is listed under Class 11 pesticides in Ontario Regulation 63/09.

VARIOUS ORNAMENTALS:

Bagworm has been reported widely in the neighbouring United States.  This is a moth whose caterpillar stage feeds on foliage from inside a protective case or ¡°bag¡±.  Look for them on cedar, spruce, and several different deciduous hosts including honeylocust and crabapple.  Foliage will turn brown and become quite sparse.  Closer examination may reveal small, brown ¡°bags¡± or cases attached to leaves and twigs and if you wait you will see the larvae move around and stick their heads out of the bags to feed.  Dipel (Bacillus thuringiensis) is not likely as effective this late in the season as larvae will be pupating soon.  At the end of the season, bags can be found on branch tips and resemble small conifer cones. Those bags contain the overwintering stage (eggs) and can be picked off and destroyed to reduce populations next spring.  Please give me a call if you are seeing this pest.

Check for adults of black vine weevil and strawberry root weevil on crops such as Picea, Rhododendron, Taxus, Thuja and Euonymus in field production nurseries and the landscape.  BVW are about 1.5 cm long, black, with mottled brown flecks on their backs.  SRW are about 0.8 cm long, reddish brown.    Adult weevils can be found hiding deep in foliage or just under leaf litter during the day.  In nursery production, Pounce and Thiodan are registered to manage the adult stages of weevils.  Applications of beneficial nematodes are no longer effective at this time.  The next window for nematodes to target the next generation of larvae in soil will be September.

Summer rate applications of horticultural oil (e.g. Landscape Oil) may be used (where permitted) so that treated foliage dries before the heat of the day.  To avoid phytotoxicity, try to apply oils once leaves have hardened off (where possible) and avoid applications on hot days.  Some uses of summer oil include:  scale insect crawlers, European red mites and mealybugs.

DECIDUOUS WOODY AND HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS:  

Have you noticed branch dieback on established sugar and Norway maples in the landscape this year?  There have been a few write-ups about it in some US newsletters.

http://www.ipmnews.msu.edu/landscape/Landscape/tabid/92/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/704/categoryId/68/Update-on-wilting-of-isolated-branches-of-Norway-maples-and-sugar-maples.aspx

http://ipmnews.msu.edu/landscape/Landscape/tabid/92/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/705/Maple-scorch-wilting-and-dieback-remain-a-mystery.aspx

Monitor for common leaf diseases such as leaf spot, anthracnose and downy mildew on herbaceous perennials and deciduous shrubs (Rosa, Prunus, Cornus).  These leaf diseases are more prevalent under late-day irrigation since the leaf wetness period is more prolonged, encouraging disease sporulation and infection.  Keep disease-prone ornamentals on a strict, mid-morning watering schedule to reduce leaf wetness periods and you will notice that the next flush of growth is much nicer.  Rhapsody is a newer biological fungicide that can be used to protect nursery crops from diseases.  There are several fungicides registered to manage leaf diseases on ornamentals.

Pear trellis rust (Gymnosporangium fuscum) is quite evident on pear trees this year in the landscape.  Look for bright orange lesions on the tops of pear leaves.  It is too late to do anything about this disease, leaves were infected during warm, wet conditions in June (from infected Juniperus sabinae, the overwintering host).  Lesions are very unsightly and sometimes lead to premature leaf drop.  Lesions will produce cr¨¨me coloured structures on leaf undersides in late summer and send spores to the alternate Juniper host.  Once the pear leaves drop, the tree is no longer infected.  Annual infection of pear depends on the alternate host, Juniper, sporulating nearby in the spring.  Keep trees healthy and where possible, protect with fungicides during sporulation period of Juniper host.  http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/crops/hort/news/hortmatt/2007/23hrt07a2.htm

Downy mildew continues to be an issue on herbaceous perennials and deciduous shrubs (e.g. Rosa, Cornus, Prunus etc.).  The fungus causes reddish-purplish splotches (whose margins are often denoted by leaf veins) on the tops of leaves.  Downy mildew can be easily mid-diagnosed.  Right after irrigation, you can often see ¡°downy¡± fuzz (sporulation) on the bottom of the leaf (but it disappears as soon as the leaves dry).  You can also put symptomatic leaves in a sealed plastic bag with a moist paper towel, check for ¡°downy¡± fuzz the next day.  This disease is exacerbated by long leaf wetness periods.  Make sure you irrigate susceptible crops early-to-mid morning to minimize the leaf wetness period.  Acrobat 50WP is registered for greenhouse ornamentals and works as a PREVENTATIVE fungicide.

Take a close look at the foliage of Norway, silver and red maples for subtle yellow halos.  These yellow halos are the beginnings of tar spot lesions.  Monitor these lesions over the next few weeks as they fill in with tar-like spots (these are the fruiting structures that will send up spores next spring).  Fungicides are ineffective at this time of year.  The lesions show up so late in the season that they have little effect on tree health, but may be a symptom that the tree is under stress.

Powdery mildew is evident on highly susceptible ornamentals (Amelanchier, Physocarpus, Rosa, Syringa etc.) right now.  Look for powdery, while residue on the tops of leaves as a symptom of this disease.  Powdery mildew can lead to chlorotic, stunted foliage that may drop prematurely.  Sulphur and copper are exempt for use as fungicides in the landscape.  In the nursery, effective fungicides include Banner MAXX, Compass, Nova, MilStop, Rhapsody (B. subtilis) etc.

Fall webworm nests are becoming more noticeable on deciduous trees (e.g. Fraxinus).  Look for webbed tents on the ends of branches with fuzzy, cr¨¨me-coloured caterpillars inside.  The tents can be easily pruned out and destroyed (e.g. squished).  Pruning out infested branches can be quite effective since there are multiple generations of this pest.  Chemical pesticides may give some reduction in webworm populations (webworms hide in the tents during the day and feed at night).  Keep in mind that many predators, parasites and pathogens attack fall webworm.  Damage from the fall webworm is usuallyinsignificant to tree health, late in the season.  Telescoping pruners can be an excellent tool for IPM.

Magnolia scale crawlers have hatched.  If you want to try insecticides for the crawlers, make sure you are making at least 3 repeat applications, 7 days apart.  This will have much better knockdown since crawler emergence is staggered.  Insecticidal soap and the summer rate of horticultural oils should give good knock down.  Malathion, Orthene and Sevin are registered for this pest in the nursery.

Beech Scale crawlers are hatching (from mid-late August to mid-late September). Adult females are covered in a white, wooly mass when mature and so they are easy to monitor this time of year.  Beech scale can be found on the bark of large beech trees (¡Ý 40cm DBH), mostly on the trunk and on the major limbs.  Although the scale insect does not kill the tree, beech scale seems to predispose the tree to other problems and create wound sites that facilitate the entry of beech bark disease (Nectria coccinea var. faginata).  Beech bark disease is a devastating fungal disease that has caused the death of several native and introduced beech trees in Ontario.  So far, the scale and the disease have been found in beech forests throughout much of southern Ontario (including cottage country).  Monitor scale populations for crawlers and treat crawlers about 3 times, every 7-10 days to target staggered emergence.  Use insecticidal soap and Landscape Oil or other registered chemical insecticides when peak hatch occurs, in the next couple of weeks or so.  Fall and spring applications of dormant oil may also reduce beech scale populations.

Japanese beetle adults are still flying.  Look for large, coppery-green metallic beetles (13mm long) with distinctive white tufts of hairs around the sides of their abdomen.  I¡¯ve had a few people report groups of JB¡¯s forming small balls on the ground (males swarming newly emerged females). They are very attracted to floral lures and Japanese beetle sex pheromones and can be easily trapped for manual disposal.  The adults will feed on the flowers (Rosa) and foliage (Tilia) of many woody and herbaceous plants.  They lay their eggs in grassy areas and the larval stage feeds on the roots of plants.  If adult populations become economically threatening, applications of Imidan, Sevin and Malathion may be warranted.  Growers: if you think a drench of Intercept will be needed to allow shipping of nursery stock outside your JB zone, the deadline for Intercept applications is August 22, 2009.

We have seen significant leafhopper populations in nursery crops (watch your Caragana, Ptelea, Acer-especially red-leaved cultivars of A. platanoides) especially after forage crops are cut.  Each year I receive calls of injury on Acer in the mid-summer and quite often, late spring leafhopper injury is to blame.  Leafhoppers (and aphids) that feed on expanding foliage will cause it to twist and become shrunken and distorted, often with blackened leaf edges.  Leafhoppers injury also appears as bronzing or stippling to mature leaves.  Monitor populations and treat with pesticides before damage becomes economically threatening.  Leafhoppers are very mobile, tiny, pale coloured jumping insects that are easily disturbed when you approach infested foliage. Leafhoppers are also attracted to yellow sticky cards, for monitoring.  It¡¯s a bit late for applications of insecticides this late in the season as populations are dwindling and the second flush of foliage has hardened off.  .

We¡¯ve noticed quite a significant population of aphids in the landscape and on outdoor nursery stock this year.  There are several species that can be found feeding on the stems and leaves of woody and herbaceous plants.  Insecticidal soap may help reduce populations of aphid, repeat applications at least weekly to give good knockdown.  In the nursery, several insecticides are registered to manage aphids on ornamental crops.

Two-spotted spider mites (TSSM, Tetranychus urticae) are quite active on field grown ornamentals (woody and herbaceous).  We¡¯ve seen them on several species, most recently on Norway maple (¡®Harlequin¡¯).  Use your hand lens to see tiny, clear bodied mites with dark regions (may be faint black) on their backs. These mites are small but the damage is significant so catch them early. TSSM overwinter as adult mites in the soil and crawl up on host plants and start feeing in late spring.  Where the egg stage is present, Apollo (an ovicide) is available to help reduce populations of eggs and newly hatched nymphs. Miticides registered for this mite in the nursery include: Apollo (eggs), DynoMite, Forbid, Kanemite, Kelthane and Vendex.

Emerald ash borer eggs and larvae can be found at this time.  TreeAzin (azadirachtin, neem) has an emergency use registration (until August 31) for emerald ash borer on ash.  This is an injectable insecticide that is delivered though BioForest¡¯s Ecoject system, to inject insecticides to protect ash trees from this borer.  For more information contact BioForest (http://www.bioforest.ca/). The regulated areas for Emerald Ash Borer have been updated (it has most recently been found in Welland). The movement of potentially infested material is restricted in new areas that are regulated under Ministerial Orders. Check out: http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/plaveg/pestrava/agrpla/survenqe.shtml

EVERGREENS:

White pine weevil larvae (Pissodes strobi) are PUPATING from inside the shoots (terminals) on pine and spruce.  Adults are emerging now.  Terminal shoots become brown, flagged or crooked in July.  PRUNE OUT infested shoots down to the original bud and DESTROY them to prevent the successful emergence of the next generation.

Spruce spider mites (Oligonychus ununguiscan be found feeding on new growth of conifers (Abies, Picea, Pinus, Thuja etc.).  Use lots of water and pressure, try to coat undersides of twigs and foliage.  Kanemite, Floramite and Vendex are registered for use against spruce spider mite in the nursery.  If you are using Kelthane, treat water if pH < 7.0 as alkaline water will decrease efficacy of Kelthane.

Taxus or Fletcher Scale (Parthenolecanium fletcheri) NYMPHS are feeding on foliage of Thuja and Taxus.  Look for honeydew and small, flat, light brown oval scales on foliage.  Applications of insecticides are most effective against newly hatched crawlers and repeated applications will be necessary since egg hatch and crawler emergence is staggered.

Cedar leaf miner (Argyresthia sp) early instar larvae are starting to feed inside tips of Eastern white cedar.  Foliar applications of systemic insecticides can be effective when applied to the young larvae (mid-late August).  A light sheering of foliage in late August will also help reduce the number of larvae that successfully overwinter.

Galls of Eastern and Cooley Spruce Gall Adelgid are more noticeable as they turn brown.  The immature adelgids that feed inside the galls are pupating and winged adults will be emerging soon out of the tiny openings in the gall.  Once insects leave the gall, it turns brown and becomes more noticeable.  A fall application of horticultural oil to the undersides of branches will help smother the overwintering stage of nymphs.

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