| Mussel scale - summer and harvest monitoring for IFP and organic growers |
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Mussel scale is normally only a very small part of scale infestation in pipfruit orchards. Summer and harvest monitoring targets all scale species and is therefore guided by the most important scale pests in each region of the country (e.g. San Jose scale in Nelson and Hawkes Bay, oystershell scale in Otago) or affecting a particular orchard. The following procedures are for all scale species combined.
Scale control must address two sources of the scale problem -
the scale insects living in the orchard
and the scale insects which arrive as immigrants each summer from
shelter trees and
other host plants. Spray thresholds for both spring and summer
control are based principally on the results of the previous
harvest, supplemented by summer monitoring where required. This
must be combined with a shelter
management programme to minimise the scale
immigration problem.
Monitoring method The primary monitoring
method is the assessment of scale (all species combined)
on harvested fruit (1000 fruit sample from bins in field, or
packhouse records). Where summer monitoring is required (see thresholds), 500 fruits per cultivar block
(e.g. 25 from each of 20 trees) should be checked for scale (all
species combined) with a x10 hand lens, paying special
attention to the calyx. Summer scale sampling should be done in
areas of the orchard thought to be most at risk from scale
invasion - i.e. close to shelter belts and other plants which
might be harbouring scale - and not spread throughout the blocks.
Late varieties, such as 'Braeburn', have greater risk of late
summer scale immigration than early varieties. Shelter and other host
plants should be checked for scale infestations as part of the shelter management programme.
TIMING: Optimum timing of first summer monitoring and/or first summer insecticide for scale should be aimed at the most important scale pest affecting the orchard and infesting shelter (e.g. San Jose scale, oystershell scale). Further information on timing may be available in-season from monitoring of crawler release by researchers/advisors.