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Invasives in Maine Agriculture Kathy Murray Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry
16

Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Jun 09, 2022

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Page 1: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Kathy Murray

Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry

Page 2: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Spotted-wing Drosophila

Drosophila suzukii

David Handley David Handley

John Obermeyer, Purdue Extension

Photo: Martin Hauser, CA Dept Food and Agric

• Pest of raspberries, blueberries, late strawberries

• Eastern region crop loss > $27 M/yr

Page 3: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

David Handley

• Rapid population increase- multiple generations/yr

• Wide host range • Wide distribution • Overwinters between stones,

under leaves, in buildings • Large economic impact

Spotted Wing Drosophila

Page 4: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Managing SWD

Monitoring Trap

Harvest Early

Exclusion Netting (Alnajjar et al. 2017)

David Handley

Natural Predation (Ballman et al.)

Page 5: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug Halyomorpha halys

Chris Bergh, Virginia Tech

• Native to Asia • Fruit/veg pest • Nuisance pest in

buildings

Page 6: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

January 2017

Page 7: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

• Detections in trailers and homes in ME

• Invades structures in fall.

• Transported on vehicles, trailers, containers

Page 8: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Allium Leafminer Phytomyza gymnostoma

• Alliums: leeks, onions, chives, garlic

• Native to Germany. Economic pest in Europe.

• Found in PA (2015), NJ

Adult egg-laying and feeding punctures

Sven Spichiger

Page 9: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Allium Leafminer

Curled and distorted leaves

(photo by Garden Focused.co.uk)

Pupae in garlic (photo by Syston Allotment Society Newsletter)

Larva

Page 10: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Swede Midge Contarinia nasturtii

• Found in 7 states and 6 CA provinces (including NY, VT, MA, Quebec)

• Deformed, unmarketable crucifer crops (broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower)

S. Ellis, USDA APHIS PPQ

Page 11: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Daylily Leafminer

Ophiomyia kwansonis

• Daylilies

• Found from TX to NY. Unconfirmed report in ME

Charley Eiseman

Steven Frank

Page 12: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Spotted Lanternfly Lycorma delicatula—native to Asia • Found in PA 2014 • Feeds on 40 species of trees and ornamentals such as

grapes, peaches, apples, dogwood, maples, walnut, oak, and pines

• PA banned transport of firewood, outdoor lawn equipment, trucks, RVs from infested locations

Photo: Gary J. Steck

Lawrence Barringer Miriam Cooperband, USDA Lawrence Barringer

Greg Hoover

Page 13: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Dickeya spp.

• Bacterial pathogens of potato.

• ‘Blackleg’ symptoms expressed under warm (> 77oF), wet conditions.

• Spread via tubers—impact on seed potato industry

• D. dianthicola widespread. D. solani not yet found in N. A.

Steve Johnson UM Extension

Page 14: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Boxwood Blight Calonectria pseudonaviculata and C. henricotiae

• Fungal pathogen

• Spreads readily from nursery plants to susceptible hosts in landscape

• Regulated in PA

Microsclerotia survive years in soil and plant debris

Page 15: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Mile-a-Minute Vine

Leslie J. Mehrhoff

Persicaria perfoliata • Herbaceous annual

climbing vine • Colonizes open and

disturbed areas • Seeds dispersed by

wildlife, water, equipment, nursery stock

• Found VA to MA

Page 16: Invasives in Maine Agriculture

Thanks! • Contributors

– Ellie Groden, Frank Drummond Lab, David Handley, Glen Koehler (UMaine)

– Sarah Scally, Carole Neil, Karen Coluzzi, Gary Fish, Ann Gibbs (ME Dept Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry)