The blueberry gall midge, Dasineura oxycoccana Johnson, is a serious pest of rabbiteye blueberries in Florida, Georgia, and Mississippi, and a potential pest of southern and northern highbush blueberries. Its damage has been observed with increasing frequency in highbush blueberry plantings in the Great Lakes region, including in Wisconsin and in Michigan. Unlike in rabbiteye blueberry plantings, where blueberry gall midge primarily damages flowering buds, it is found to damage only the vegetative shoots of northern highbush blueberry. In this study, farms throughout Michigan were surveyed for the presence of blueberry gall midge and it was found in 43 of 46 sampled farms in 11 counties. From 2009-2011, several monitoring techniques, including yellow sticky traps, emergence traps, observational sampling, and vegetative shoot dissections were used to determine the ecology of this species in blueberry fields in southwest Michigan. Emergence traps were most useful in early detection of blueberry gall midge in April, and observational sampling for damage symptoms and vegetative shoot dissections revealed multiple population peaks throughout July and August. Infestation was detected in vegetative shoot tips in all parts of the bushes, with initial infestation greatest at the base of bushes. Degree day accumulations until first midge detection and peak infestation suggest some potential for predicting key events in the pest's phenology. This information about the distribution and timing of infestation will be useful in developing management strategies for blueberry gall midge infestation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/EN12002 | DOI Listing |
Neurochem Int
November 2024
Norwich Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Front Microbiol
August 2024
Food, Nutrition and Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Introduction: Stem and crown gall disease caused by the plant pathogen has a significant impact on highbush blueberry () production. Current methods for controlling the bacterium are limited. Lytic phages, which can specifically target host bacteria, have been widely gained interest in agriculture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Resour Announc
February 2024
Institute of Plant and Microbial Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan.
Bbcg2-2 is a strain isolated from a crown gall sample of blueberry () cultivar "Flicker" grown in Taiwan. The complete genome sequence of this bacterium consists of a 2,798,342-bp circular chromosome, a 2,140,031-bp linear chromid, and a 386,016-bp circular plasmid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Econ Entomol
October 2023
Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, 578 Wilson Road, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.
The gall wasp, Hemadas nubilipennis Ashmead, is a pest of highbush and lowbush blueberry and can pose a challenge to control with foliar sprays due to adult activity being during bloom and because larval development is within plant tissues. We hypothesized that systemic insecticides that move within the blueberry vascular system would reach areas where H. nubilipennis eggs are laid, causing larval mortality.
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