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Under Glass: Greenhouse Pest Management Dr. Carol Sutherland Extension Entomologist, NMSU & State Entomologist, NM Dept. Agriculture

Under Glass: Greenhouse Pest Management · 2014. 4. 4. · Azatrol, Neem Azadirachtin, neem Yes Somewhat harmful M-Pede Insecticidal soap Yes Harmless to adults Source: Whiteflies

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  • Under Glass: Greenhouse Pest Management

    Dr. Carol SutherlandExtension Entomologist, NMSU &

    State Entomologist, NM Dept. Agriculture

  • Greenhouses & Hoop Houses---Tall or SmallWhatever You Can Imagine

  • Greenhouses & Hoop Houses: What Can They Do?• ‘Extend’ your growing/harvesting seasons---more yield, income potential

    • Start seeds earlier, have transplants for the field; add a ‘short crop’?

    • Greenhouses vs hoop houses---Size? Design? Construction costs? Durability? Ease of maintenance & repair? Costs to operate?

    • Environmental control? None vs cooling, heating; air circulation

    • Downside of ‘farming indoors’? Common pests? Management opportunities?

  • …If you plant it…

    …they will come…

  • Deer, Elk, Wild Hogs, Javelinas, Cattle, Etc.

    Obvious destroyers of greenhouses, hoop houses, plants, etc.

    Besides obvious destruction, whatever is leftis likely contaminated with feces, microbes

    FENCING! Multiple fence barriers?

    Pest Management Practices---Dr. Sam Smallidge, NMSU, Extension Wildlife Specialist

  • Mice, Squirrels, Pack Rats, Rabbits, Etc.

    Evidence of activity: Plant loss, gnawing, feces, finding animals, trails, entry holes

    Impacts: Microbial contamination! Food poisoning! Produce losses! Hanta virus foryou in some areas; plague?

    Avoidance requires constant monitoring, attention to maintenance, quick responses to any infestation

    Pest Management Practices for Rodents, Rabbits---Dr. Sam Smallidge, NMSU, Extension Wildlife Specialist

    http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&docid=KdmXi1UFrM1GmM&tbnid=zBoU7o896529VM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Health_Human_Services/Environmental_Health/Control___Preventions_of_Rodents.aspx&ei=pvj8Us-eLsqArAHcy4DIAQ&bvm=bv.61190604,d.aWc&psig=AFQjCNEXxQcpER-ufwksa-C-kld1vF5AmA&ust=1392396837574112http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&docid=KdmXi1UFrM1GmM&tbnid=zBoU7o896529VM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Health_Human_Services/Environmental_Health/Control___Preventions_of_Rodents.aspx&ei=pvj8Us-eLsqArAHcy4DIAQ&bvm=bv.61190604,d.aWc&psig=AFQjCNEXxQcpER-ufwksa-C-kld1vF5AmA&ust=1392396837574112

  • Sowbugs & Pillbugs

    Land-dwelling, air-breathing crustaceans with chewing jaws

    Adults & immatures can feed on/in compost, soil organic matter& plants (esp. seedlings, transplants, foliage, flowers, fruits)

    Both are actively crawling and feeding at night, dawn---whenmoisture levels are usually higher

    Limit moisture & organic matter in infested areas. Omit mulch around plants ‘at risk’Irrigate in early morning; soil dries before sunset?Use drip or furrow irrigation, rather than sprinklers?Raised beds??

    Hand picking ineffective; no traps; no magic pesticide here

  • Snails & Slugs

    UC IPM Project

    Wikipedia

    TAMU

    Brown garden snail

    Decollate snail

    Common garden slug

    Air-breathing mollusks; muscular mouths with rasp-like radula; bodiescovered with slime; muscular ‘foot’.

    Brown garden snail et al. can overwinter in topsoil; mulch is protective.

    BGS and slugs are plant feeders; decollate snail is omnivorous

    Rasp holes in foliage, fruit, stems; leave shiny trails of slime

    Decollate snail may feed on slugs, other snails but take years to limittheir reproductive capacity, numbers; can feed on plants, too

    Get Certifier’s opinion/approval for othertreatments: copper bands, coppersulfate, iron phosphate

  • Consider Using Traps to Detect/Monitor Pests?

    Thrips Leafhoppers Aphids Whiteflies

    Fungus gnats Psyllids Leafminers

    Remember: you must be able to identify the pest of interest!

  • ThripsVery tiny < 1/16” long; like folds,

    crevices in foliage, flowers, buds

    Immatures white; adults yellow,

    tan to brown

    Wings fringed; only 1 mandible

    Rasp and suck plant sap; kill cells

    Transmit pathogens—e.g.tomato

    spotted wilt---dirty mouthparts

    Control difficult to impossible….

  • Tomato Spotted Wilt VirusOn Tomato, Pepper, More---Requires Lab Analysis to

    Verify

    Destroy suspect

    plants

    Viruses have no

    controls

  • Thrips Management

    • Parasitoids? Thripobius luteus, commercially available but efficacy is ??

    ( snazzy, but save your money?)

    • Predators? Conserve these (outdoor situations); permit entry into GH?

    Green lacewings---easiest to find/see

    Minute pirate bugs

    • Plants affected by viruses?---pull them out & dispose 12

  • Common Aphids---usually cool weather pestsSucking, needle-like mouthparts

    Host specificity: broad to narrow, by sp.

    Weaken & wilt plants; can kill plants

    Honeydew makers! Ants et al. arrive

    Potential plant virus vectors (dirty mps)

    Many have female only colonies

    Live birth! 8-12 daily/30 days as adult

    1 week from birth to ‘Mom’

    1

  • Pepper Viruses & Aphid Vectors

    14

    Pepper Mottle Alfalfa Mosaic Cucumber Mosaic

    Winged aphids

    can take virus

    from one field

    or host plant to

    another

    Wingless aphids

    can transmit

    virus within fields,

    among hosts

    ‘Dirty mouthparts’

  • Aphids in the GH or Hoop House?

    15

    Forceful streams of water?

    Predators, parasitoids?

    Neem, neem oil, horticultural oil products?

    NO TREATMENT FOR VIRUSES IN

    PLANTS---OTHER THAN PULLING !

    Aphidius ervi (Braconidae)

    ‘Mummy’

    Green lacewing

  • Beet Leafhoppers – Curlytop Virus Vectors

    London Rocket

    (mustard weed) Beet Leafhopper---3mm long

    Beet Leafhopper picks up Curlytop Virus from weeds & transmits it to popular veggies

    Yes, curlytop CAN occur in GHs & hoop houses---from transplants

    Spinach Beans Beets Peppers Melons, squash

  • Managing Beet Leafhoppers, Curly Top?

    Yellow sticky cards---for detecting onlyreally have to identify pest correctly;

    CANNOT ‘trap them out’

    Insecticides? Not effective; hoppers cantransmit pathogens faster than

    insecticides can act

    Eliminate Weeds---reservoirs for disease;

    staging place for new pests

    Plant Extra Plants---destroy infected ones;still have enough for your crop

  • Tomato/Potato Psyllid - Bactericera cockerelli

    Native to North America (Central America and north)

    Sucking mouthparts; ‘psyllid yellows’ may be actual disease! Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum

    Since 2009-2010, serious pest in potatoes in western U.S.; also pests of tomato, peppers, eggplant (?) (Solanaceae)

    Life cycle = about 4-5 weeks at summer temps.

    Females may lay 30-250+eggs/each (inserted into host plant)

    Abt. 1/16”; appears as black dot

    Eggs minute,stalked

    Nymphs flat,

    slow moving

    Series of nymphs, very flattenedNymphs on undersideof leaves

  • Potato---Especially

    Ugh –ly, yucky taste, too

  • More Impacts of Tomato/Potato Psyllid

    20

    Vein greening in tomato (CO) Honeydew globs from psyllid

    feedingtomato & pepper

  • Vegetable Leafminer(Diptera, Agromyzidae, Liriomyza spp.)

    Damaging Stage: larva mines foliage

    Adult fly: abt. 1/16” long; yellow &black; red compound eyes

    Maggot: 1/8” long at maturity

    Evidence: minute white dots on foliage; serpentine, silvery mineyellowish maggot in mine

    Numerous mines in foliage can cause leaf loss,fruit sunburn, decreased growth or fruiting

    Variety of natural enemies for larvae; ignore?Or not?

    Insecticide Resistance IS a possibility

  • Whiteflies: Greenhouse, Silverleaf, Sweet Potato • Adults minute (2mm), white, ‘moth-like,’

    ‘swirling flight,’ sucking mps; many hosts

    • Nymphs immobile, scale-like, sucking mps

    • Chlorosislethal; honeydew; sooty mold; virus vectors

    • Common vegetable hosts (among others) include:

    Cucurbitaceae: squash, melons, cukes, pumpkins

    Solanaceae: tomato, eggplant, potato, peppers

    Malvaceae: okra

    Fabaceae: beans

    Asteraceae: lettuce et al.

    Scott Bauer USDA-ARS; Silverleaf wf

    David Cappaert, MI State Univ; Greenhouse wfAPS.net; Bemesia tabaci complex ‘pupa’

  • Whitefly Identification: Magnifying Glass!

    Pay attention to the Greenhouse WF & Sweet Potato WF (Silverleafwill be essentially identical to Silverleaf)

    ID of adults = Self explanatory

    ID of mature nymphs/’pupae’ or cast skins (exuviae):

    Greenhouse WF: pill-box like with vertical sides; projecting‘filaments’ elongated, readily visible on edges.

    Sweet Potato WF (essentially the same as Silverleaf): thickerin the middle, thinner around all edges; no verticalsides; short, sparse setae around edges.

    Source: Whiteflies in the Greenhouse, ENTFACT-456, Jen White.

  • Whitefly Management?There are natural enemies commercially available, e.g.

    However, beneficials can be killed by insecticides, including ‘organic ones.’

    Encarsia formosa Eretmocerus eremicus Delphastus catalinae

    Trade Name (e.g.)

    Active Ingredient or Category

    OMRI? Effect on Biologicals

    Botanigard Beauvariabassiana fungus

    Yes Relatively harmless

    AZA-Direct, Azatrol, Neem

    Azadirachtin, neem

    Yes Somewhat harmful

    M-Pede Insecticidal soap

    Yes Harmless to adults

    Source: Whiteflies in the Greenhouse, ENTFACT-456, Jen White.

    Remember: No control ofvirus-infected plants ispossible; pull them out &dispose

    READ THE LABEL FIRST!

    CALL YOUR CERTIFIER FIRST TO CONSULT, GET APPROVAL FOR USE!

  • Fungus Gnats

    Richard Leung David Caeppart Whitney Cranshaw uga1455188 MSchmidt

    Whitney Cranshaw

    Whitney Cranshaw

    Adults annoying; larvae feed on soil organic matter, small roots

    Both can be very abundant; contaminate produce

    Control? Azadirachtin (Aza-Direct, Azatrol), Beauveria bassiana (Naturalis-O),Pyrethrins (Pyganic)---READ THE LABEL! CALL YOUR CERTIFIER FIRST! THESEPRODUCTS CAN HARM OTHER BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENTS IN YOUR GH!

  • Flea Beetles(Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae, Several Genera)

    Damaging stage: adult (chewing);

  • Flea Beetle Control*---if needed at allActive Ingredient Example, Trade

    NameOMRI?

    Azadirachtin Azatrol, Yes

    Beauveria bassiana Mycotrol-O, Naturalis

    Yes

    Pyrethrins Pyganic Yes (only 2 formulations are OMRI approved—EC 1.4 & EC 5.0)

    Spinosad Entrust Yes

    *Realize that, if you have other biological control agents active in the growing area, they may be harmed by application of these materials.

    READ THE LABEL FIRST!

    CALL YOUR CERTIFIER FIRST TO CONSULT, GET APPROVAL FOR USE!

  • Cutworms & ArmywormsAdults---night flying, many

    species, gray, tan, brown; ‘miller

    moths’

    Larvae---dull colors, plump;

    feed at night (chewing mps),

    hide in soil litter & mulch by day

  • Beet Armyworm

    Damaging Stage = Larva, chewing pest; bare,2-tone green, lateral ‘stripe’

    Evidence on plant: ‘windows’ in leaves; blackgritty frass; fine silk or web; larva!

    Many potential hosts among veggies

    Adult active at night

    Generalist predators & parasitoids will attackimmatures, but may not control numerous BAWs

  • Beet Armyworm Controls*---If needed

    Active Ingredient Trade Name, e.g. OMRI?

    Bacillus thuringiensis** Dipel, Biobit, Deliver, Agree, some others

    Yes

    Azadiractin Azatrol, Neemix Yes

    Spinosad Entrust Yes

    *Be aware that, except for Bacillus…, use of these other controls may harm otherBiological agents in the greenhouse

    **affects many species of Lepidoptera, both moths and butterflies, but not all

    READ THE LABEL FIRST!

    CALL YOUR CERTIFIER FIRST TO CONSULT, GET APPROVAL FOR USE!

  • Cutworm, Armyworm (et al.) Management

    Remove weeds from garden area

    before planting (alternate food sources)

    Kill armyworms & cutworms as you

    find them

    ‘Solarization’ or ‘solar

    soil sterilization’ over

    previous winter or when

    you’re not planting soon

    May not be applicable

    for GH & hoop house

    planting

  • Cutworm Control*---if needed

    32

    Active Ingredient Trade Name, e.g. OMRI?

    Azadirachtin Aza-Direct Yes

    Beauveria bassiana Naturalis Yes

    Pyrethrins Pyganic Yes

    Spinosad Entrust Yes

    *Use of these products may affect biological control agents in the GH

    READ THE LABEL FIRST!

    CALL YOUR CERTIFIER FIRST TO CONSULT, GET APPROVAL FOR USE!

  • Spider MitesNearly microscopic; 8-legs; slow-moving; fine silk? Dusty undersides of leaves?

    Paired mouthparts small enough to puncture/kill cells; ‘silvering’death

    Hot, dry, dusty conditions favor these; numerous hosts

    Green Light L&G Spray (spinosad), Trilogy (azadirachtin), M-Pede (soap) areOMRI approved but can harm other biological control agents. READ THE LABEL& CALL YOUR CERTIFIER! THESE ARE REALLY TOUGH PESTS TO CONTROL!

  • AntsVariety of species; smallest abt. 3mm;

    largest abt. 6-7mm; black , reddish brown or combination; ‘workers’ always wingless; reproductive ants often larger than workers; reproductives winged initially (mating only), but remove wings later

    Most species can bite (with jaws), many also sting (with stingers)

    Social insects with very numerous workers

    Impact: Microbial contamination; some chewing damage on fruit, honeydew;annoyance, stinging; in compost?

    Harvester ant

    Pyramid antFire ant

    Naturalis, Pyganicmight be helpful

    READ THE LABEL

    CALL YOUR CERTIFIER!

  • One More Pest?TermitesFeed on wood, wood products---e.g. stakes,

    posts (etc.) used in construction, raised beds, buried wood/cellulose debris or old stumps

    Life Cycle: most likely termites will be ‘subterranean’ spp.; attack wood from soilcontacts, tunnel wood, ‘mud tubes’

    Impacts: chewing jaws on workers, tunnelingweaken wood, wood failure

    Replace wood with metal? Pipe? Sheet metal?

  • We Have Covered Elements of Integrated Pest

    Management

    Your Tools:

    • Cultural:

    – What sells? What cultivars are best adapted to your area?

    – Water & Soil test. Apply ‘just enough’ soil amendments

    • Physical/Mechanical:

    – To mulch? Or NOT to mulch? (consider pest presence)

    – Eliminate weeds; hand pick pests; strong stream of water, other?

    – Sanitation---including GAPS (Nancy Flores, NMSU Food Technology)

    • Natural Enemies: conserve/support; introduce?

    • Insecticides: OMRI! READ LABELS! CERTIFIER APPROVAL!

    • Documentation: Spend ‘quality time’ scouting your crops. Record observations, treatments, results; pest IDs, calling your certifier for help…

    36

    …a combination of biological, chemical and cultural pest control methods* that reduce

    pest damage to acceptable levels while maintaining environmental integrity---guided by

    National Organic Program principles & practices & NMDA-Organic Program.

  • Hoop House Construction for New Mexico:12-ft. x 40-ft. Hoop House

    Del Jimenez, Ron Walser, Reynaldo Torres, 2005, NMSU CES Circular 606

    Quote from the end of p. 4:

    “By choosing selective low-profile fruits and vegetables that withstand cold temperatures, it

    is possible to grow most of the year without the use of heating equipment and electricity.

    These structures, with special plastic covers, can keep inside temperatures 4º to 6º F

    warmer than outside temperatures, and with a row cover made from specially improved

    webbings over the crop, another 4º to 6º F increase can be obtained.

    With these structures one can make farming of food crops affordable, profitable and fun all year around….”

  • Row Covers? Can Retain Heat, Insulate Plants

    Order this material from on-line sources

    When all else fails…..check out Amazon.com

  • My Contact Info:

    • Dr. Carol Sutherland

    • Extension Plant Sciences

    • N140 Skeen Hall, NMSU

    • Las Cruces, NM

    [email protected]

    mailto:[email protected]