[Pollinator] Pollinator Digest, Vol 1929, Issue 1

bmoisset at aol.com bmoisset at aol.com
Tue Oct 10 15:16:08 PDT 2017


I agree with Hilary. Getting rid of the invasive Ailanthus altissima would be an excellent idea even without this new invasive pest.
https://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/pubs/midatlantic/aial.htm

Beatriz


BeatrizMoisset
bmoisset at aol.com
http://bugguide.net/user/view/667
http://pollinators.blogspot.com/
http://pollinatingbee.blogspot.com/
 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Hilary Cox <crumpetlee at gmail.com>
To: pollinator <pollinator at lists.sonic.net>
Sent: Tue, Oct 10, 2017 5:39 pm
Subject: Re: [Pollinator] Pollinator Digest, Vol 1929, Issue 1


    Why not just kill Ailanthus? It is mostly an extremely invasive    species...
    https://www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/plants/treeheaven.shtml
    Hilary Cox
    Leescapes Garden Design
    Avon  IN
    
    
On 10/10/2017 1:32 PM, Clement Kent      wrote:
    
    
      
re: The          Spotted Lanternfly and Ailanthus        

          
        
I think Kirk            Wattles is right to worry about this invasive bug. It            doesn't just feed on Ailanthus trees, it attacks some            commercial crops and some native trees, so efforts to            control it are going to be vigorous. The weakness it has is            its preference to feed on the Ailanthus tree in late summer            and lay eggs there in the fall. This is the reason            Pennsylvania is encouraging people in Lanternfly infested            zones to dose their Ailanthus trees with neonics            (imidacloprid, dinetofuran) before the bugs arrive.
        

          
        
Unfortunately,            there are reports from beekeepers that honeybees do like            Ailanthus flowers when in bloom. Bloom time is listed as            June-July. I think one constructive step would be for PA            agricultural authorities to amend their instructions to say            something like "if you use systemic pesticides on Ailanthus            trees, be sure to do so in early August, not before". This            will give the bees 10 months before they encounter the            pesticides in next year's flowers, which will reduce the            effective dose. It will also ensure the dose is higher when            the lanternflies arrive on the trees.
        

          
        
An alternative            for those willing to do a bit more work is to use something            like a horticultural oil spray on the trunks of Ailanthus            trees. As this requires contact, it won't kill everything,            but it should also get rid of egg clusters if they are            sprayed. The PA Agriculture folk recommend inspecting            Ailanthus trees on a property, cutting down the ones that            are less attractive to lantern flies, and just treating the            remaining ones. This should make whatever treatment is used            more effective.
        

          
        
Dr. Surendra Dara,              an IPM and crop advisor at the University of California ,              says "A parasitic wasp called Anastatus orientalis may have potential because it is              reported to parasitize up to 69 percent of spotted              lanternfly eggs in China." The USDA Agricultural            Research Service has recently started evaluating natural            controls in China - see https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=338695          but it is often many years before such natural enemies can be          determined to be effective and safe for release. Recently ARS          and PA researchers reported than a parasitoid long ago          introduced to North America for gypsy moth control is now          attacking lantern fly eggs - see https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5270392/          . Since this parasitoid is already in the US, there would          presumably be no objections to mass rearing it and releasing          it at lantern fly infestations. The USDA is presumably          studying this. 
        
        

          
        
Clement Kent
      
      

        
On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 3:00 PM, <pollinator-request at lists.sonic.net>          wrote:
          
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            Today's Topics:
            
               1. Spotted Lanternfly - a growing threat to insect              pollinators
                  (Kirk Wattles)
            
            
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            
            Message: 1
            Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2017 10:14:10 -0400
            From: Kirk Wattles <kwattles at verizon.net>
            To: pollinator at lists.sonic.net
            Subject: [Pollinator] Spotted Lanternfly - a growing threat            to insect
                    pollinators
            Message-ID: <15f06a2bde1-c09-30e05 at webjas-vae124.srv.aolmail.net>
            Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
            
            Friends,
            
            We're having a problem here in eastern Pennsylvania which            will likely have dire consequences for pollinator insects            (and others) in a wide section of the U.S., if not            nationally.
            
            I'm not an expert, but I know that 1 + 1 + 1 = 3.
            
            1 - The Spotted Lanternfly (Lycorma delicatula) is an            leaf-hopper-type insect that got started as an 'invasive' in            Berks County, Pennsylvania 4-5 years ago.
            
            1 - Official resources for containing and extirpating the            SLF are inadequate. The would-be quarantine zone has            expanded several times in the last two years, with nothing            to suggest that the invasion will be contained.? Wherever            the Ailanthus tree grows, they will multiply.
            
            1 - Neonicotinoid pesticides are the only "best" treatment,            and probably neonics (and other pesticides) will be very            heavily used by official agencies, farmers, and DIY            horticulturalists, and anyone who wants to protect their            trees. With knock-on effects on many other insects.
            
            I don't know how far knowledge of this problem has reached,            but I see little sign of concern or news coverage outside of            the locally affected areas.
            
            I won't elaborate on the details of the problem.? Again, I'm            not an expert.? I'm a beekeeper.? I heard through beekeeping            clubs in the affected area that local people were freaking            out, 4-6 weeks ago when the SLF graduated from the            instar/nymph stage and began dropping from the trees in            massive numbers.? When I investigated, I began to see how            neonics were being promoted by word of mouth and recognized            by the officials running the current efforts.? And how the            invasion is in the mid-phase of exponential growth.
            
            A lot of the relevant information and links are collected in            a facebook group 'Spotted Lanternfly' and on a facebook page            'Spotted Lanternfly Watch.' (Links to those may trigger spam            filters, so you can just look them up for yourselves.)? The            main agencies involved currently are the Pennsylvania            Department of Agriculture and Penn State University.
            
            It should be self-evident, to anyone who knows bugs reading            through that material (including the comments by            knowledgeable observers in the zone), how bad this problem            is likely to be.
            
            --
            Kirk Wattles
            kwattles at verizon.net
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