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Sapsucking Insects
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Sapsucking Insects

Jan 02, 2016

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genevieve-parks

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Page 1: Sapsucking Insects

Sapsucking Insects

Page 2: Sapsucking Insects

OBJECTIVES OF SAPSUCKING INSECTS

At the end of this section students should be able to:

1) Describe the symptoms and damage of sapsucking pests.

2) List the major types of sucking pests and give example of one of each type that is important in commercial or urban forests.

3) Explain why control of these pests is so difficult.

4) Describe the relationship between some sapsucking pests and forest pathogens.

5) Describe control approaches used in management programs for these pests.

Page 3: Sapsucking Insects

Sapsucking pests are difficult problems

1) Inconspicuous

2) Hard to control

Because they are:

Sapsucking pests have piercing-sucking mouthparts

Sapsucking pests are Homoperta & HemipteraSapsucking pests are also Arachnida (mites)

Sapsucking pests rarely kill trees Scale insects, some adelgids are the exceptions

Sapsucking Pests

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Population Dynamics – P/S Insects

Insect populations are affected by:

1. Destruction of natural enemies2. Dust accumulation3. Very cold weather4. Dispersal (wind, people, quarantines)5. Plant Resistance

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1.Numbers increase dramatically when insecticides are used as often they kill beneficial insects more effectively than the pest.

2. Numbers increase when dust accumulates on plants as dust interferes with natural enemies searching ability

4. Numbers decrease in very cold weather as this kills individuals and reduces quantity quality of food supply

5. Natural dispersal by wind, crawling, flight. Most major pests introduced on infested nursery stock so quarantines significantly reduce spread

3. Plant Resistance reduces population numbers. Sometimes only reasonable approach to controlling sapsucking pests

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Discolored and/or curled foliage

1) Damage from removal of nutrients and toxic saliva

Symptoms and Damage

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1) Damage from removal of nutrients and toxic saliva

Abnormal shoot growth

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1. Damage from removal of nutrients and toxic saliva

Premature leaf drop

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1) Damage from removal of nutrients and toxic saliva

Branch and/or tree mortality

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Adelgid Caused Mortality on Fir

1) Damage from removal of nutrients and toxic saliva

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2. Damage from excretions

Honeydew and/or black mold on foliage

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3. Damage from oviposition activities

Cicadas, tree hoppers, sawflies Tree crickets

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Cicada oviposition damage

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4. Disease Transmission

Aphids and Leafhoppers

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Elm Phloem Necrosis my kill more elms than Dutch Elm Disease

Cause: A Phytoplasma

Vector: Leafhoppers

Characteristic “butterscotch” Discoloration of inner bark

4. Disease Transmission

Page 16: Sapsucking Insects

Common & Important / Unimportant Sapsucking pests

• Asian Hackberry Woolly Aphid• Gall Forming Insects• Hemlock Woolly Adelgid• Spruce Adelgid• Beech Bark Scale• Saratoga spittlebug

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Alate (winged) aphid

Apterous (non-winged)aphids

Cornicles

Hemiptera Aphids - Many species and types

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Asian Woolly Hackberry Aphid

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White pine aphids

Pine Aphids (Cinera spp)

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Spruce Aphids

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Spruce aphid damage

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Gall Forming Insects

• Tend to be host specific• Interesting life cycles• Leaves, twigs, stems, petioles• Unsightly• Urban vs Forest settings

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Hackberry gall psyllid

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Aphid Galls on Hickory

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Vagabond gall aphid Poplar Petiole gall aphid

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Oak Sower Gall (a Wasp Gall)

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Spruce GallAdelgid

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Hemiptera: Adelgids - many species

Once called aphids

Differ in insect:Morphology - no cornicles Life Cycle - always lay eggs Hosts - only conifers

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Adelgids

Hemlock Wooly Adelgid

Accidentally introduced to PNW - 1920’s

Found in Virginia in 1953

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Adelgid Bole infestation

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Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

Feeding causes needledrop. Complete defoliation & death of tree.

Can kill a tree in a single year

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Introduced Predator of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

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Video – Hemlock at Risk

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Management - Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

Private vs Public Lands

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Balsam Woolly Adelgid

•Another conifer pest killing trees•Imported pest from Europe•Weakens and/or kills true firs•1 of most important sucking pests •2- 4 generations / year•No Males Known to exist•Few economical controls

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Balsam Woollyadelgids – Feedingon tree trunk

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Feeding Damage

Bole infestations cause formationof reddish colored compression wood

Poor H2O conduction qualities

Toxic saliva causes increase incell numbercell size thickened cell walls and tracheids

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Butterscotchwood of abalsam woollyadelgid infestedtree

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Feeding Damage

Heavy crown infestations cause formation of twiggouting and reduces new shoot growth and eventual death of the tree

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Impact on true firs in North America is severe

•Complete stand mortality•Significant timber losses•Reduced tree growth•Reduced seed production•Killed millions of board feet

Management & Control in US

Few controls available

Page 42: Sapsucking Insects

Pine bark adelgids – native insect

Found throughout North America

Attack Scots, jack, pitch, white andPonderosa pines

Stunt growth, produce honey dew, & occasionally kill trees

Spread is slow due to reduced mobility

Page 43: Sapsucking Insects

Pine bark adelgid

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Hemiptera - Scale Insects

Soft Scales – cottony, waxyArmored Scales – hard coversEriococcid ScalesMargaroid Scales

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Cottony Maple Leaf Scale

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Cottony Cushion Scale

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Tortoise Scale and Sooty Mold

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Pine Tortoise Scale and Sooty Mold

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Striped pine scale and sooty mold

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Hemiptera

The Armored Scales: covered with a hard wax or protective coating

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HemipteraOystershell scale

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White Pine Needle ScaleHemiptera

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Beech BarkDiseaseExpansion

Hemiptera

Beech Scale

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Black areaCurrent Distribution Of beech Disease

Grey areaDistribution Of BeechTrees

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Beech Bark Disease Cycle – Insect & Fungus

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Beech Bark Scale

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Beech Bark Scale – Close up

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Fruiting bodies of fungus – infecting scale wounds

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Cankers coalescing – fungus/insect

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Yellowing & Declining American Beech

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Management & Outlook

Beech Bark Scale

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Eriococcid Scales European Elm Scale

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Hemiptera Red Pine Scale

Red Pine Needle Scale Adult Male

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Red pine scale – Matsucoccus resinosae

•Introduced pest•Large numbers of Red pine killed•Infested trees die within 5 years•No effective controls (except cold (-23 C)•Currently large tracts in Connecticut being harvested due to mortality

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Hemiptera Margaroid Scales

Pit Scales - they cause small pits

Asterolecanium spp - Pests of Oaks

Heavy infestations kill trees, especially when associated with drought or Anthracnose fungi

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Hemiptera Plant Bugs - Miridae

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Hemiptera Boxelder Bug

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Hemiptera Lace bugs

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Spider MiteDamage

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Management Approaches

Do Nothing

Insecticides

Natural Enemies

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White Pine Needle Scale & Lady Bird Beetle Predator

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Management Approaches

Cultural Management Strategies

Keep trees healthy

Regulations – Quarantines

Integrated Pest Management

Example: Rating system for Saratoga Spittle bug on Red Pine

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Saratoga spittle bug

Immature insects feed on alternate host which includes sweet fern

Adults feed on pine (no spittle)Serious pine pest – lots of mortalitydieback, growth loss

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Saratoga SpittlebugDamage on Red Pine

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Hemiptera

Spittle bugs

Pine spittle bug – serious pine pest in forest, urban and Christmas tree plantations

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Spittlebug adult

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Saratoga spittlebug on Alternate Host

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Sweet Fern - Alternate Host of Saratoga Spittlebugalso feeds on willow shoots

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Saratoga Spittlebug Decision Model

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