San Jose scale has a wide range of host plants, mainly
deciduous trees. Most of the population is on the trunks, stems,
and branches of the trees, but the leaves and fruits are also
attacked. Over 700 species of host plants in 240 genera and 81
families have been reported. It is most destructive on apples,
pears, and stone fruits, including sweet cherry, peach, plum,
prune, almond and nectarine. Damage to pipfruit can be so severe
as to kill branches and main leaders of the trees, and has even
caused the death of young trees in New Zealand. San Jose scale
also occurs on grapes, kiwifruit, and walnuts, and has been
reported on berryfruits overseas. Willows, birches, elms, alders,
poplars, mountain ash, and other common ornamental trees serve as
reservoir hosts for this pest outside orchards. Shelter trees are
often the most important sources of San Jose scale dispersing in the
orchard environment and the correct choice of shelter species can
make a major contribution to cultural control.
Shelter tree species and varietal selections differ in their
susceptibility to San Jose scale, and some shelter species,
such as Casuarina spp., are not hosts of San Jose scale.
Large willow trees on stream banks and in gullies close to
orchards are a large source of scale insects in some regions,
such as Nelson.
| Family |
Host
plants |
| Aceraceae |
maples, Acer spp. |
|
| Actinidiaceae |
kiwifruit, Actinidia spp. |
|
| Betulaceae |
alder, Alnus glutinosa |
alder, Alnus rhombifolia |
| |
alder, Alnus rubra |
birch, Betula pendula |
| |
hornbeam, Carpinus spp. |
|
| Cupressaceae |
cypress, Cupressus spp. |
false cypress, Chamaecyparis
spp. |
| |
juniper, Juniperus spp. |
Thuja spp. |
| Fabaceae |
false acacia, Robinia spp. |
|
| Fagaceae |
beech, Fagus spp. |
|
| Graminae |
bamboo, Bambusa spp. |
|
| Grossulariaceae |
blackcurrant, Ribes
nigrum |
currants, Ribes
spp. |
| |
gooseberry, Ribes
uva-crispa |
redcurrant, Ribes
rubrum |
| Hippocastanaceae |
horse chestnut, Aesculus spp. |
|
| Juglandaceae |
walnut, Juglans regia |
|
| Pinaceae |
cedar, Cedrus spp. |
hemlock, Tsuga spp. |
| |
larch, Larix spp. |
pine, Pinus spp. |
| |
spruce, Picea spp. |
|
| Platanaceae |
plane, Platanus spp. |
|
| Rosaceae |
almond, Prunus
amygdalus |
apple, Malus
spp. |
| |
apricot, Prunus
armeniaca |
European plum,
prune Prunus domestica |
| |
firethorn, Pyracantha
spp. |
hawthorn, Crataegus
sp. |
| |
nectarine, Prunus
persica var. nectarina |
peach, Prunus
persica |
| |
pear, Pyrus
communis |
rose, Rosa
spp. |
| |
rowan, Sorbus
sp. |
sour cherry, Prunus
cerasus |
| |
sweet cherry, Prunus
avium |
|
| Salicaceae |
crack willow, Salix fragilis |
flevo poplar, Populus deltoides x
nigra 'Flevo' |
| |
hybrid willow, Salix matsudana x
alba |
matsudana willow, Salix matsudana |
| |
poplar, Populus spp. |
poplar, Populus deltoides x nigra
Flevo |
| |
willow, Salix spp. |
|
| Taxaceae |
yew, Taxus spp. |
|
| Taxodiaceae |
swamp cypress, Taxodium spp. |
umbrella pine, Sciadopitys
spp. |
| Tiliaceae |
lime, linden, Tilia spp. |
|
| Ulmaceae |
elm, Ulmus sp. |
|
| Vitaceae |
grape, Vitis sp. |
grape, Vitis vinifera |