Description of the Pest
The adult psyllid is a small insect (about 0.12 inches or 3 mm) that resembles a cicada. The adults have white or yellowish markings on the thorax, clear wings, and lines on the abdomen between segments. The tiny eggs are laid on stalks most commonly on the underside of leaves and along leaf margins and are best seen with the use of a hand lens. Initially white, they turn yellow a few hours after they are laid.
Nymphs hatch from eggs in 4 to 15 days and have scalelike flattened, oval, yellowish green to orangish bodies with red eyes and three pairs of short legs. Older nymphs are greenish and fringed with hairs and have wing buds, which make them easy to distinguish from whitefly nymphs; psyllid nymphs will also move if disturbed while whitefly nymphs cannot. They develop through five stages (instars) in 2 to 3 weeks before becoming winged adults. Nymphs feed most often on the underside of leaves.
Tomato psyllids have an extensive range of acceptable hosts, but solanaceous plants (tomatoes, potatoes, nightshades) are preferred. Among tomato varieties, it has a preference for the yellow pear tomato.
Damage
Nymphs and perhaps adults inject a toxin while feeding on the leaf that causes death in transplants, stunting, chlorosis and curling of leaves in preflowering plants, and either no fruit production or overproduction of very small, noncommercial-grade fruit in larger plants. These symptoms are collectively known as "'psyllid yellows"' or "vein greening". A bacterium, called Candidatus Liberibacter psyllaurous or Ca. L. solanacearum, has also been associated with these symptoms in tomatoes.
Management
Monitor for tomato psyllids during the growing season to detect populations that have the potential to stunt plants.
Biological Control
While predators and parasites may attack psyllids, most parasites attack too late in the psyllid life cycle to stop crop loss and biological control does not appear to be a promising control strategy in the field.
Organically Acceptable Methods
Sprays of the Entrust formulation of spinosad are acceptable for use on organically certified produce.
Monitoring and Treatment Decisions
Yellow sticky cards placed at the field margins near the tops of plants can be used as an indicator of psyllid movement into the field in areas where the pest occurs. If tomato psyllids are caught in the traps, examine foliage of tomato plants on the field margins for eggs and nymphs. If adults are present, a treatment may be warranted.
Applications of imidacloprid (Admire Pro) at planting for thrips and whiteflies provide some control of psyllids. Resistance to imidacloprid, a neonicotinoid, has not been documented in California. However, resistance to neonicotinoids has been observed in Texas. Applications through drip irrigation are most effective, but a liquid application can be shanked about 1 to 2 inches below the seedline (in furrow application) at planting. Do not apply foliar imidacloprid because applications are short lived. Rotate with other insecticides to minimize resistance development.
If psyllids are present in the field, it is very important not to use carbamates (e.g., Sevin-foliar applications, Lannate, Vydate) for the control of other pests as these materials actually promote the development of psyllid populations.
Common name | Amount per acre** | REI‡ | PHI‡ | |
---|---|---|---|---|
(Example trade name) | (hours) | (days) | ||
Not all registered pesticides are listed. The following are ranked with the pesticides having the greatest IPM value listed first—the most effective and least harmful to natural enemies, honey bees, and the environment are at the top of the table. When choosing a pesticide, consider information relating to air and water quality, resistance management, and the pesticide's properties and application timing. Always read the label of the product being used. | ||||
GROWING SEASON | ||||
A. | IMIDACLOPRID | |||
(Admire Pro) | 7–10.5 fl oz | 12 | 21 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 4A | ||||
COMMENTS: Do not apply to vegetables grown for seed. Soil applied or through drip at transplant. Review and follow the California neonicotinoid regulations effective January 1, 2024. Permissible application rates of this insecticide may be lower than label rates if applying more than one neonicotinoid active ingredients or using more than one application method in the same season. |
||||
B. | SPINETORAM | |||
(Radiant SC) | 5–10 fl oz | 4 | 1 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 5 | ||||
C. | ABAMECTIN* | |||
(Agri-Mek SC) | 1.75–3.5 fl oz | 12 | 7 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 6 | ||||
D. | SPIROTETRAMAT | |||
(Movento) | 4–5 fl oz | 24 | 1 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 23 | ||||
E. | SPIROMESIFEN | |||
(Oberon 2SC) | 7–8.5 fl oz | 12 | 1 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 23 | ||||
F. | SPINOSAD | |||
(Entrust)# | 1.25–2.5 oz | 4 | 1 | |
(Success) | 4–8 fl oz | 4 | 1 | |
MODE-OF-ACTION GROUP NUMBER1: 5 |
** | See label for dilution rates. |
# | Acceptable for use on organically certified produce. |
‡ | Restricted entry interval (REI) is the number of hours (unless otherwise noted) from treatment until the treated area can be safely entered without protective clothing. Preharvest interval (PHI) is the number of days from treatment to harvest. In some cases the REI exceeds the PHI. The longer of two intervals is the minimum time that must elapse before harvest. |
1 | Rotate chemicals with a different mode-of-action group number, and do not use products with the same mode-of-action group number more than twice per season to help prevent the development of resistance. For example, the organophosphates have a group number of 1B; chemicals with a 1B group number should be alternated with chemicals that have a group number other than 1B. Mode-of-action group numbers are assigned by IRAC (Insecticide Resistance Action Committee). |