In this Issue:

GUEST ARTICLE

Managing Risks with Food Alliance Certification


VEGETABLE NEWS

Vegetable Insect Update

Callisto Herbicide Now Registered for Sweet Corn

GRAPE NEWS

Grape Flea Beetle

STRAWBERRY NEWS

Strawberry Sampling Data from MDA and Grower Cooperators

APPLE NEWS

Pest Focus: Codling Moth (Cydia pomonella) and Its Look-Alikes

Apple Scab Infections

Pest and Disease Events in Apple and Strawberry

Weekly Trap Counts


Insect, Pest Fact Sheets

Vol 2 No.3   May 23, 2005

Apple Pest Focus : Codling Moth (Cydia pomonella) and Its Look Alikes

click to enlargeCodling moth (CM) is an introduced pest of apple in North America. It has 2 to 3 adult generations in Minnesota (May to September). Other hosts include crabapple and pear. The adult moth is grayish with a chocolate-brown patch and some bronze metallic scales at the tip of each forewing. Body length is about 9 mm with a wingspan of 20 mm. The eggs are laid singly on fruit or on the upper leaf surface. Larva is a pinkish-white caterpillar with a brown head capsule. Body length is about 15 mm when mature. Larvae feed inside the fruit and on the seeds. CM overwinter as mature larvae. Pupa is brown and about 13 mm long. Overwintering larvae and pupae are usually found in cocoons under loose bark. Fruit injury is in the form of a sting or a deep entry.

In Minnesota, there are at least two different moths that may be captured in traps and confused with CM: eyespotted bud moth (EBM), and Proteoteras sp.

EBM (click to enlarge)EBM is smaller (body length about 6 mm with a wingspan of 14 mm long) than CM. There is a gray-white band in the middle section of the front wing. EBM is an introduced minor pest of apple.

 

 

 

Proteoteras (click to enlarge)Proteoteras is also smaller (body length about 8 mm with a wingspan of 18 mm long) than CM. It can be differentiated from CM by the tufts of scales on the front wing. Proteoteras is not considered an apple pest.

 

 

You can find more information about codling moth and its look-alikes on the MDA web site at: www.mda.state.mn.us/biocon/cm.pdf and www.mda.state.mn.us/biocon/biologycm.pdf and www.mda.state.mn.us/ipm/applefg/cm.pdf

 

 

 

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Co-Editors: Bill Hutchison ( hutch002@umn.edu), Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota, Jeanne Ciborowski, Minnesota Department of Agriculture, Ag. Resources Management and Development Division, and Suzanne Wold-Burkness ( woldx018@umn.edu), Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota

The Newsletter is published weekly from May through August, cooperatively, by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) and the University of Minnesota (U of MN). Reports are posted on the U of MN and MDA web sites on Fridays. If you have suggestions and/or comments, please send your contributions by 4 p.m., Wednesday to Jeanne Ciborowski, 651-297-3217, jeanne.ciborowski@state.mn.us , MDA, 90 W. Plato Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55107-2094. You can access the Newsletter at the U of MN web site in htm format at: www.vegedge.umn.edu/MNFruit&VegNews/mnindex.htm and at the MDA web site in pdf format at: www.mda.state.mn.us/biocon/fruitreports/

Partial funding for this publication is provided through partnership agreements with the Minnesota Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association (MFVGA) and the United States Department of Agriculture – Risk Management Agency (RMA). These institutions are equal opportunity providers.

DISCLAIMER

Reference to products in this publication is not intended to be an endorsement to the exclusion of others which may have similar uses. Any person using products listed in this publication assumes full responsibility for their use in accordance with current manufacturer directions.

                    


The University, including the Minnesota Extension Service, is an equal opportunity educator and employer. ©1999-2004 Minnesota Extension Service, University of Minnesota. All rights reserved. Contact copyright@extension.umn.edu for information on reproduction or use of this material.