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Pecan Weevils - Press Release, 1999
News release, August 12, 1999, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580) 224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Pecan Producers: Watch for Weevils!
Early signs indicate a good pecan harvest ahead
for Ardmore-area orchards, but at least one threat remains that could
change the prospects for the worst - pecan weevils.
"The dry weather keeps most of them locked up
in the ground," said pecan specialist Scott Landgraf, with the Noble
Foundation in Ardmore, "but watch out when there is a significant
rain."
"There is no way to follow what someone else is
doing in their orchard; rainfall patterns will be as different as
weevil populations, so watch what is going on in your orchard,"
Landgraf urged area pecan growers.
Although Oklahoma-grown pecans are generally
known for having high-quality meats, past weevil infestations have
resulted in area nut crops being so severely discounted, there was no
price offered for them, Landgraf said.
Now is the time for pecan producers to act
against the destructive insects. Landgraf suggests the following
steps:
1) Identify the best way to apply insecticide
to control weevils. If a significant problem exists, a mist blower is
most often used for larger orchards, while a handgun sprayer is
acceptable for smaller acreages. Aerial application is another
possibility, Landgraf said, with helicopter applications slightly
preferred.
2) Estimate the weevil population. One of the
most effective techniques is trapping adult weevils. Research has
shown circle traps* placed on tree trunks catch the most weevils.
Pyramid traps are accepted as reference traps, but are vulnerable to
livestock since they sit on the soil surface. Another scouting method
is to spray a tree with Sevin 80S insecticide and see what falls onto
a tarp placed on the ground below it. As a last resort, try shaking
limbs over a pickup bed and see what falls out.
Looking at pecan nuts can indicate weevil
activity. If a weevil bores a hole into a developing nut still in the
liquid or gel stage, the nut will abort and fall to the ground within
three days. When checking nuts on the ground, look for "tobacco
stains" from fluids emerging from the puncture.
Nuts remain on the tree after reaching their
solid state after being punctured by a weevil. The weevil's tracks
are visible around the drill hole, often making it look like a bull's
eye. Producers finding the telltale tracks may already be too late -
eggs or even larvae are inside the nut.
Sevin, the pesticide of choice for weevil
control, has a 10- to 14-day residual period. When that time has
passed, orchard managers should begin scouting for another
infestation. Often, a second insecticide application is required, and
with bad infestations, even a third may be needed.
Weevils are a threat from mid-July to early
October. Weevil larva pupates in the soil, where they remain for two
or three years. Some soils prevent the escape of adult weevils until
it is softened by rainfall. Dry periods can group weevil
concentrations for more specific control opportunities.
"For best control, orchards must be scouted
individually - a neighbor's information may be useless," Landgraf
said.
To learn more about trapping weevils and their
control, obtain the Oklahoma State University Cooperative Extension
Fact Sheet F-7190, or visit the pecan production web site at
http://www.dasnr.okstate.edu/pecan.
Landgraf can be contacted by calling the
Foundation at (580) 223-5810.
# # #
* - Photos
available on the Noble Foundation web
site at www.noble.org in the News Releases section.
(FYI The Noble Foundation
is a privately funded, nonprofit organization headquartered in
Ardmore, Okla. The Foundation conducts agricultural and plant biology
research; provides grants to numerous other charitable and
educational organizations; and assists farmers and ranchers through
educational and consultative programs.)
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