How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Pear
Harvest Fruit Sample
(Reviewed
11/12
, updated
11/12
)
In this Guideline:
|
|
|
At
harvest, take a fruit sample from the bins to assess the effectiveness of the
current year's IPM program and determine the needs of next year's program. Look
for insects or damage,
and try to determine what pest may have caused the damage.
Record
your observations (example form )
HOW TO SAMPLE
Examine 200 fruits per bin from 5
bins per orchard (or 20-acre block in larger
orchards) for a total of 1,000 fruit for insect or disease damage.
Look for the presence of
- Stings or
deep entries: an indication of codling
moth
-
Superficial
feeding on skin: an indication of
obliquebanded
leafroller larvae (summer generation)
-
Black
sooty mold: an indication of:
-
Russeting: an indication of
-
Pearleaf
blister mite
(Oval, convex spots less than 0.5 inch in diameter with a surrounding halo of
clear tissue; spots frequently run together, leaving fruit deformed and
misshapen.)
-
Pear rust
mite (Uniform
areas of russeting localized in stem end or calyx)
-
Western
flower thrips
(Pockmarked areas of russeting and shallow scabbing)
-
Deep depressions: indication of
-
Western
boxelder bug
(Depressions with white pithy areas under skin)
-
Consperse
stink bug
(Depressions concentrated near stem end; white pithy areas in fruit under
depression; may be confused with boxelder bug)
-
Lygus bug (Similar to stink bug but
feeding areas can have an open pustule; hard cells located in fruit under
pustule).
-
Misshapen
fruit: an indication of early season caterpillar damage caused by obliquebanded
leafrollers and
miscellaneous caterpillars (green
fruitworm, fruittree
leafroller)
-
Bumpy
fruit: San
Jose scale (Red
halos may be present around scale.)
-
Other types of damage:
-
Scabby
areas on fruit surface: an indication of pear scab (Fruit may also be
misshapen.)
IMPORTANT LINKS
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines:
Pear
UC ANR Publication
3455
General Information
L. G. Varela (Crop Team Leader), UC IPM Program, UC Cooperative Extension Sonoma County
R. B. Elkins, UC Cooperative Extension Lake County
R. A. Van Steenwyk, Insect Biology, UC Berkeley
C. Ingels, UC Cooperative Extension Sacramento County
L. R. Wunderlich, UC Cooperative Extension El Dorado County
Top of page
|