JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Discover
- AuthorAgnello, Arthur (2)Spangler, Steve M. (2)Reissig, W.H. (1)Weires, R.W. Jr. (1)Weires, Richard W. Jr. (1)
-
SubjectAgricultural IPM (4)
Apples (4)Fruits (4)Tree Fruit (4)Pears (2)Apricots (1)Beans - Fresh and Dry (1)Berries (1)Blackberries (1)Blueberries (1)... View More
-
Date Issued
1991 (4)
- Typesfact sheet (4)
-
Has File(s)
true (4)
Search
Now showing items 1-4 of 4
- Sort Options:
- Relevance
- Title Asc
- Title Desc
- Issue Date Asc
- Issue Date Desc
- Results Per Page:
- 5
- 10
- 20
- 40
- 60
- 80
- 100
Apple Maggot
Reissig, W.H. (New York State IPM Program, 1991)
The apple maggot (AM), a native of eastern North America, originally bred in large fruited hawthorns (Crataegus sp.). Later, it adopted apple as another host, and it has become a major fruit pest in the northeastern United ...
Tarnished Plant Bug
Spangler, Steve M.; Weires, Richard W. Jr.; Agnello, Arthur (New York State IPM Program, 1991)
The tarnished plant bug is found throughout North America, but it is primarily a pest in temperate nondesert areas. It feeds on more than fifty economically important plants , including alfalfa , cotton, strawberries, ...
European Apple Sawfly
Weires, R.W. Jr. (New York State IPM Program, 1991)
The European apple sawfly is an introduced pest that was first noted in North America infesting crabapples on Long Island (Farmingdale, N.Y.) and Vancouver Island (Victoria, B.C.) during 1939 and 1940, respectively. Since ...
Comstock Mealybug
Spangler, Steve M.; Agnello, Arthur (New York State IPM Program, 1991)
The Comstock mealybug (CMB) was first reported in the United States in 1918 concurrently in New York and California, and has since spread to all coastal states and the Ohio and Mississippi River valleys. Its fruit hosts ...