Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Landscape and Nursery - Boxwood Spider Mite
Boxwood spider mites started hatching this week. They overwintered as eggs. The mites are small and clear to light yellow in color and you will need a hand lens to see them. As they mature they will be light yellow to yellowish-brown. They are on the undersides of the foliage. The feeding of the mites will cause stippling to the foliage and heavily infested leaves will turn yellow and drop.
Control: Japanese boxwood appears to be less susceptible, but we found boxwood mite on several cultivars of Japanese boxwoods growing in full sun in 2007. The common boxwood such as the English and European types tends to be very susceptible. Columnar forms of boxwood appear to be very susceptible. We have used the mite growth regulator Hexagon and obtained season long control if applied early in the season. Other materials that work well include Floramite, Akari, Avid, and horticultural oil (directed at the undersides of the foliage).
Reprinted from the May 23, 2008 edition of the TPM/IPM Weekly Report for Arborists,
Landscape Managers & Nursery Managers from the University of Maryland Cooperative Extension.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Landscape and Nursery - Mites Present Now
Spruce Spider Mite, Oligonychus ununguis
Spruce Spider Mite. Photo by Petr Kapitola, State Phytosanitary Administration, Bugwood.org
Host: Look for spruce spider mites on junipers, spruce, arborvitae, cryptomeria, dawn redwood, hemlock, and pine.
Monitoring: Examine twigs for red eggs, usually near the base of the needles. The nymphs that are hatching are light colored. You can place a clipboard with white paper under the tree branches, rap the branches several times, and examine what’s crawling on the paper using a 10 -15 X magnification lens.
Control: Horticultural oil works very well on this mite. The mite growth regulators Hexygon and TetraSan work well when applied to young populations of mites. Avid, Floramite and Acari are some other options.
Boxwood Spider Mite, Eurytetranychus buxiBoxwood Spider Mite. Photo from Rayanne Lehman, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bugwood.org
Boxwood spider mite overwinters as eggs and should be hatching in early April in most of Delaware. They have multiple generations per year but they become less active as we move into the hot part of the summer.
Hosts: English and European boxwood
Host resistance: Japanese and Korean boxwood tend to be less susceptible to boxwood mite
Monitoring: Use the clipboard/rap test for this mite. The mites will be tan colored with relatively long legs.
Control: Avid, Hexygon, horticultural oil, insecticidal soap
Information modified from the March 28 edition of the TPM/IPM Weekly Report for Arborists, Landscape Managers & Nursery Managers, University of Maryland Cooperative Extension. http://ipmnet.umd.edu/08Mar28L.pdf