The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.    
     
 
 
     

News release, July 23, 1998, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580) 224-6379.
  email: cblara@noble.org

Drought, Grasshoppers Assail Area Pecan Trees

Local lawns, gardens, pastures, and flowerbeds aren't the only things under attack this summer from drought stress and ravenous grasshoppers — trees and shrubs also are taking a beating.

On especially young trees and shrubs, the effect could be fatal, according to Scott Landgraf, soil and pecan specialist at The Noble Foundation in Ardmore. Landgraf said he has been asked about tree damage from grasshoppers stripping off the leaves, a problem faced by many deciduous trees, including fruit and nut-bearing trees like the profuse pecan trees in the area.

As grasshoppers run out of tender plants on the ground, they're taking to the air — and onto trees.

"Defoliation of a tree during the growing season is never good," Landgraf said. "It is usually not immediate death, but it could be life threatening if the tree initiates new growth later into the fall."

Landgraf said new growth is usually in response to rainfall — something the area is as short on as it is long on grasshoppers. If new growth on trees and shrubs doesn't have time to harden before the first frost, freeze injury is inevitable, he said.

The severity of freeze injury depends on how succulent the new growth is when it freezes, and the severity of the first and subsequent freezes. Landgraf said a severe winter, after defoliation followed by some regrowth, could result in "extreme die back and maybe even death."

"I would encourage people who have the capability to water their trees now to stimulate new growth that will have time to harden off before fall freeze," Landgraf said. "As new growth develops, a labeled insecticide such as Sevin (dust or spray) should be applied to the leaves for protection against grasshoppers."

He added that nuts will not form on defoliated trees.

The ongoing drought also is critical for this year's pecan harvest.

"The water demands of pecan trees are at their highest in August and September," he said. "We expect to see a tremendous drop in the pecan harvest in August if we don't see rainfall by then."

He said watering individual trees might also help alleviate future defoliation this summer, since grasshoppers seem especially prone to select stressed trees, such as those growing in thin soils or those especially affected by drought conditions. Landgraf advises against mass spraying of trees, however, such as on commercial pecan operations.

"The concern with pecan trees is that spraying trees with any of the insecticides labeled for grasshoppers will reduce beneficial insect populations as well," Landgraf said. "The killing of those beneficial insects could release aphids that may be an even worse problem.

"One possibility is to treat the area under the trees or vegetation in the area to which grasshoppers are attracted," he added.

 

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Photos related to this article, click on thumbnail for large photo :

 Close-up photo of a grasshopper devouring a bull nettle leaf after other green plantlife has been eaten by the horde of invaders in Southern Oklahoma.
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 Close-up view of one of the swarms of grasshoppers invading pastureland along the Red River in Love County.

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 A grasshopper climbing up a Southern Oklahoma pecan tree. The grasshoppers seem to prefer climbing over flying to the leaves, and select particular trees to eat.
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2.17 MB JPEG

 

These photos have been saved as high quality JPEGs for most efficient download. If you prefer another format, such as TIFF, save the photos to your disc, open them in your image editing program, and then use the Save As function to resave them in the format of your choice.

A close-up view of a grasshopper on a pecan tree trunk near Burneyville, Okla.
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 Pecan leaves decimated by devouring grasshoppers at the Noble Foundation's Red River Demonstration and Research Farm in Love County.
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 Grasshoppers cluster on an electric pole in a Love County cattle pasture during the afternoon heat.
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 Grasshoppers swarm a bull nettle, one of the few green plants left in a grasshopper-infested pasture in Southern Oklahoma.
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 Although proving costly and annoying pests to area farmers, ranchers and landowners, grasshoppers like this one on a gourd vine are sometimes brightly colored.
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Grasshoppers climbing up a pecan tree trunk on a pecan operation in Love County.
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 All photos/Courtesy the Noble Foundation

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(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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