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Fruit IPM Working Group: Priorities
Priorities developed by the fruit IPM working group, posted
November 7, 2003
All fruit
Extension
- Education for growers using GIS as a tool for pest management.
- Education regarding implementation of IPM programs and potential
economic benefits.
- Education regarding monitoring techniques, economic thresholds,
etc.
- Education regarding use of limited-spectrum insecticides or alternative
management strategies such as mating disruption as replacements for
broad-spectrum materials and potential secondary effects.
- Increase amount of money available for Extension outreach programs
- Promote educational support to independent crop consultants/IPM
scouts on relevant IPM issues
- Aiding in the transition to web-based information delivery
- Education for growers to recognize new and/or emerging pests and
associated damage.
- Pocket pest ID guides
- Resources for developing educational materials
- Sprayer and irrigation pesticide application resources (evaluations,
calibration, best use patterns, etc.)
- Support for determining research and extension priorities for the
NE region fruit crops (grower surveys)
Research
- Improved monitoring and management of root diseases caused by Phytophthora
spp.
- Effective monitoring strategies for key pests in which techniques
currently do not exist.
- Increase available research dollars
- Management strategies for vertebrate pests
- Continued R/D for use of parasitic nematodes for control of root
feeding insects. An analyses of efficacy and economics are needed,
especially for new species with special characteristics. For
example S. kraussei is being sold as being especially effective in
cold soils, and S. scarabaei may have broad effectiveness against
both scarab and root weevil larvae.
- Improved monitoring and management techniques for tarnished plant
bug
- Develop treatment thresholds for many key pests of tree fruit and
small fruit.
- Improved management techniques for vertabrate pests, especially
birds and deer.
- Research pertaining to biology, ecology and behavior of new and
emerging pests such as Halyomorpha halys, the brown marmorated
stink bug
top
Organic
Research
- Management strategies for key pests that are acceptable for organic
production.
top
Perennial
Research
- Long-term weed management practices for perennial crops, reducing
reliance on fumigation and herbicides
- Non-target effects of imidacloprid use in perennial fruit crops
Small fruit
All small fruit
Extension
- Annual regional meeting of small fruit pest management and
production specialists
- Directory of small fruit pest management resources, regional and
national
- Regionalized small fruit pest management guide and web page
Research
- Evaluation of organic (OMRI approved) pest management methods in
small fruits
top
Berry
Unspecified
- Biodegrabable mulches during establishment
- Bird management
- Blackberry winter injury management.
- berry cranberry fruit worm & others?
- berry winter injury; Phomopsis
- Currant aphid management.
- Development and testing of softer materials and non-pesticide options
- Imported currant worm risk management.
- Sap beetle in strawberry
- Small fruit plant protection - updates
- Small fruit weed management
- Strawberry: herbicides and decline
- Strawberry: herbicides and soil health
- Sap beetle
- Weed control: herbicide availability
- Beetle spp. as root feeders
- Black vine weevil in strawberry
- Imported currant worm management.
- Organic production methods
- Organic production methods all berries
- Plastic mulch disposal issues
- Raspberry crown borer; borers
- Slugs in strawberries
- Strawberry decline & replant
- Two-spotted spider mites in strawberry
- Weeds as alternate hosts: TPB, nema¹s
- Crown borer in brambles
- Development and testing of replacement materials
- TPB in strawberry & brambles
Extension
- Outreach to Garden Centers, small scale growers, and homeowners
on
- Programming for adaptation and expanded adoption of IPM methods
for
Research
- Blueberry Scorch virus - geographical distribution, identification
of genetic strains, development of control/containment strategies,
development of resistant varieties.
- Evaluating IPM-compatible pest management strategies for managing
blueberry maggot to replace the current strategy of calendar spraying
top
Bramble
Extension
- Expanded programming in pest management related to brambles grown
in
- Demonstration grants showing feasibility of IPM in brambles
top
Cranberry
Research
- Determining ecosystem-wide changes in pest, natural enemy, and other
beneficial insect populations as a result of implementing new selective
reduced-risk insecticides in cranberries
- Pheromone trap captures as a predictor of larval populations in
the following year for the cranberry blossomworm
top
Grape
Extension
- Expanded programming in viticulture in Coastal New England
Research
- Black Goo/Esca in Grapes - geographical distribution, identification
of genetic strains, development of control/containment strategies
Unspecified
- Development and testing of softer materials and non-pesticide options
- ERM management, products, timing
- Grape berry moth management.
- Powdery mildew management
- Powdery mildew management strategies
- Soil health
- Vertebrate management: birds and deer
- Assessment of miticide resistance in ERM
- Downy mildew management.
- ERM and factors that flare mites
- Fungicide resistance
- Harmonia risks
- Organic vs. conventional vs. biodynamic
- Phytotoxicity of phosphorous acid in tank mixes
- Powdery mildew alternative materials
- Low input management of Phomopsis
- Rigorous investigation of compost teas and other soft materials
for IPM
top
Ribes
Research
- White Pine Blister Rust in Ribes - geographical distribution in
the wild (on Ribes and Pinus) and testing commercial cultivars for
immunity and/or resistance to local strains of the fungus in order
to determine if modifications to restrictive regulations which still
exist in some states can be made without undue risk to the forest
ecology and/or lumber industry.
top
Strawberry
Extension
- Expanded programming in pest management related to annual strawberry
Research
- Anthracnose in strawberries - one of the most serious limitations
to the adoption of annual strawberry production is the pervasive distribution
of anthracnose in the production of rooted runners or plugs for this
system (fall planting). We need to have a reliable way to either
exclude this disease from the plug production system or to clean it
up before plugs are distributed. More generally, there is a
need for improved disease management in small fruit nurseries, as
propagation material (field grown strawberry crowns) is a significant
source of inoculum for nematodes and pathogens. Growers go to
great pains to establish new fields, to rotate crops, or to fumigate
in order to eliminate these pests, so shipping plants with pathogens
defeats these efforts.
- Improved monitoring and management techniques for root weevils in
strawberries, brambles, blueberries
- Development of strawberry varieties for the Northeast with enhanced
tolerance/resistance to soil-dwelling pests and diseases.
top
Tree fruit
All tree fruit
Unspecified
- Late season OFM & CM without OP¹s
- Resistance management strategies for powdery mildew
- Development and testing of softer materials and non-pesticide options
- Fire blight management - shoot blight
- Fire blight management. - alternative materials
- IPM - cost reduction
- New chemical registrations and uses
- Organic production methods
- Resistance management strategies for insects
- Groundwater-risky products: replacement or other options
- Herbicide escapes: pigweed, ragweed
- Organic production methods all tree fruit
- Plant bug & Mullein bug management.
- Reduction of OP¹s and replacements
- TPB obstacle for T pyri conservation
- Weed management in orchards (all tree fruit)
- Develop Integrated Production Management - IFP
- Dogwood borer management
- Efficacy of "soft" chemical programs
- Evaluation of sprayers and coverage issues.
- Integrated control of mites
- Pesticide drift onto neighbors¹ property
- Postharvest decay management and associated mycotoxins
- Protection of predatory mites from EBDC fungicide programs in wet
years
- Replacements for OP¹s, carbamates, pyrethroids
- Stink bug management & trap crops
- X-disease management.
- Abandoned orchards as reservoirs for pests
top
Apple
Unspecified
- Apple scab management in wet years
- OBLR management
- OBLR-materials, timing, coverage
- Interaction between herbicide phytotoxicity, winter injury &
other factors contributing to decline in high density apple plantings.
- Resistance monitoring for fungicides in apples
- Scab-resistance screening
- Apple scab ascospore maturity
- OBLR & Honeycrisp, (Ginger Gold?)
- Resistance management strategies for apple scab
top
Peach
Unspecified
- Mating disruption for OFM in peaches
top
Pear
Unspecified
- Fabraea leaf spot management. on pear
top
Pome
Unspecified
- Fire blight management using blossom blight models
- Fire blight-shoot blight phase
- Mating disruption for OFM in apples and pears
top
Stone fruit
Unspecified
- Bacterial canker on stone fruits
- Southwest injury on stonefruits
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