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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Apricot
Pacific
Flatheaded Borer
Scientific name: Chrysobothris
mali
(Reviewed 11/07,
updated 11/07)
In this Guideline:
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Pacific flatheaded borer adults are generally present in May and
June. When spring months are warm, they may be seen as early as March or early
April. The adult beetle is
about 0.4 inch long with a dark bronze body and coppery spots on the wing
covers. A fully grown larva is
light-colored, with a prominent, flat enlargement of the body just behind the
head. There is one generation each year.
DAMAGE
Pacific flatheaded borers are attracted to diseased or injured
limbs, such as those affected by sunburn, scale insects, bacterial canker, or
major pruning cuts. The beetles lay eggs in the injured area. Eggs hatch and
the larvae excavate large caverns just beneath the bark and bore tunnels deep
into the heartwood of the tree. Excavations are usually filled with finely
powdered sawdust. Injury by this borer will cause the sap to flow, and the
affected area will appear as a wet spot on the bark. Later, these areas may
crack and expose the mines. Feeding by Pacific flatheaded borers may cause a
portion of the bark on older trees to die, or it may girdle and kill young
trees. This borer can be particularly damaging to new grafts in established
orchards.
Flatheaded borers often invade sunburned areas on the trunk of newly
planted trees. At planting time, wrap or paint the tree trunk above and 1 inch
below the soil line with white, water-based paint or whitewash to protect the
trunk from sunburn and flatheaded borer invasions. In older trees the best way
to avoid infestations is to keep the trees sound and vigorous. Prune out all
badly infested wood and burn or remove it from the orchard before the growing
season starts. Spraying for this insect is not recommended.
IMPORTANT LINKS
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Apricot
UC ANR Publication 3433
Insects and Mites
W. W. Coates, UC Cooperative Extension, San Benito County
R. A. Van Steenwyk, Insect Biology, UC Berkeley
W. J. Bentley, UC IPM Program, Kearney Agricultural Center, Parlier
K. R. Day, UC Cooperative Extension, Tulare County
K. A. Kelley, UC Cooperative Extension, Stanislaus County
J. L. Caprile, UC Cooperative Extension, Contra Costa County
Acknowledgment for contributions to Insects and Mites:
L. C. Hendricks, UC Cooperative Extension, Merced County
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