During the fruit development season examine fruit and leaves for the presence of, or damage caused by, pear psylla, mites, mealybugs, caterpillars, aphids, sawfly (pearslug), thrips, and plant bugs.
Keep records of your observations (example form ).
How to Sample
Take weekly samples of shoots that contain a fruit cluster, one from the treetop and one at eye level, from each of 20 trees in a 20-acre block. Examine both leaves and fruit for pests.
Leaves
Use a 10 to 14X hand lens to examine 5 leaves per shoot (total of 200 leaves) for
- Pear psylla (nymphs, eggs, and honeydew)
-
Mites
- European red mite (on both top and eye-level shoots)
- Twospotted and other webspinning spider mites (early season, primarily on eye-level shoots; later in season top and eye-level shoots)
-
Other pests
- Aphids (russeting and honeydew)
- Pearslug (eggs and larvae)
- Pearleaf blister mite (damage)
- Katydids (feeding damage and nymphs on trees and cover crop)
Fruit
Examine fruit for evidence of pests or damage:
- Codling moth (stings and larval entries)
- Obliquebanded leafroller (look where fruit touch)
- Pear rust mite (russeting at calyx and stem ends)
- Boxelder bugs (mostly in areas near riparian corridors)
- Lygus bugs
- Stink bugs (also do a 30-minute search for adults)
Decision Table
Sample type | Pest | Management decision |
---|---|---|
Leaves |
Pear psylla |
|
European red mite |
|
|
Webspinning (e.g. twospotted) spider mites | For Bartlett and Bosc varieties (thresholds for Asian pears and other
varieties are generally higher):
|
|
Aphids |
|
|
Pearslug |
|
|
Pearleaf blister mites |
|
|
Katydids |
|
|
Fruit clusters |
Codling moth |
|
Obliquebanded leafroller |
|
|
Pear rust mite |
|
|
Plant Bugs: | ||
Consperse stink bug |
|
|
Western boxelder bug |
|
|
Lygus bug |
|