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Pests and Diseases

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Pests and Diseases 28.00: Examine distinguishing characteristics of pests so as to determine best management practices. 29.00: Compare methods of control of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pests and Diseases


1
Pests and Diseases
  • 28.00 Examine distinguishing characteristics of
    pests so as to determine best management
    practices.
  • 29.00 Compare methods of control of
    horticulture plant pests.

2
What is an insect?
  • Small animals that have three body regions and
    three pairs of legs equaling six legs
  • Body regions
  • head
  • thorax
  • abdomen

3
Types of Insects
  • The five types of mouthparts are important in
    identifying and controlling insects.
  • Chewing
  • Piercing
  • Rasping
  • Siphoning
  • Sponging

4
Chewing Insects
  • Insects tear, chew or grind food
  • Examples
  • grasshopper
  • beetle

5
Piercing Insects
  • Punctures plant and sucks the sap

6
Rasping insect
  • Rasps or breaks surface and sucks sap
  • Example
  • thrips

7
Siphoning insects
  • Have a coiled tube they dip into liquid food such
    as nectar and draw it in
  • Example
  • butterfly

8
Sponging Insects
  • Have two sponge-like structures that collect
    liquid food and move it into the food canal
  • Example
  • housefly

9
Life Cycles
  • Complete metamorphosis has four stages
  • egg
  • larva-worms or caterpillars
  • pupa
  • adult-flies, beetles, etc.

10
Life Cycles
  • Incomplete metamorphosis has three stages
  • egg
  • nymph
  • adult

11
Life Cycles
12
Chewing Insects
  • Parts of leaves are eaten away
  • beetles
  • cutworms
  • caterpillars
  • grasshoppers

13
Chewing Insects
  • Beetles
  • eat leaves, stems, flowers, fruit and nuts
  • Cutworms
  • usually attack stems, but may eat other plant
    parts

14
Chewing Insects
  • Caterpillars
  • larva of moths and butterflies
  • fuzzy or hairy
  • eat young leaves and stems
  • roll up in leaves making leaves curl
  • Grasshoppers
  • eat all parts of plants

15
Sucking Insects
  • Aphids
  • Leaf bugs
  • Mealy bugs
  • Scale
  • Thrips
  • Whiteflies

16
Aphids
  • Pierce and suck juices
  • known as plant lice
  • cause stunted growth and yellow spotted leaves
  • causes sticky substances and black mold
  • will attract ants

17
Aphids
18
Leaf Bugs
  • Cause plants to look unhealthy
  • plants will lose their normal color and wilt

19
Leaf Bugs
20
Mealy Bugs
  • Pierce and suck from underside of leaves and in
    leaf axils causing yellow appearance and sticky
    secretions

21
Mealy bugs
22
Scale
  • Appear as black or brown raised lumps attached to
    stems and underside of leaves causing yellow
    leaves and stunted growth

23
Scale
24
Thrips
  • Chew and then suck causing plant tissue to become
    speckled or whitened, leaf tip to wither, curl
    up, or die

25
Thrips
26
Whiteflies
  • Feed on underside of young leaves causing
    yellowing
  • will look like flying little white specks when
    plants are shaken

27
Whiteflies
28
Mites
  • Attack underside of leaves causing gray to
    grayish-green spots
  • severe infestations cause webbing

29
Mites
30
Plant Diseases
31
Diseases
  • A disease is a plant disorder caused by an
    infectious pathogen or agent

32
Diseases
  • There are 3 conditions necessary for diseases in
    plants
  • host plant
  • disease causing organism or pathogen must be
    present
  • favorable environment for disease organism to
    develop

33
Pathogens
  • There are four groups of pathogens
  • bacteria
  • fungi
  • viruses
  • parasitic plants (attach to plants)
  • mistletoe
  • dodder
  • lichens

34
Blight
  • Causes plants to quickly turn brown or black as
    if they had been burned

35
Blight
36
Canker
  • Causes open wounds on woody plants

37
Canker
38
Damping off
  • A fungal disease that causes young plants and
    seedlings to rot off at soil level

39
Damping Off
40
Gall
  • Swellings or growths on plants

41
Leaf Spots
  • Rings of different shades of brown, green or
    yellow that make spots on leaves

42
Mildew
  • Grows on leaf surfaces--both upper and lower--as
    white, gray or purple spots

43
Mosaic
  • Caused by viruses that make the leaves have
    irregular mottled areas with patterns ranging
    from dark green to light green to yellow to white

44
Mosaic
45
Rots
  • Cause plant to decay and die

46
Rust
  • Causes small spots on leaves that resemble
    yellow, orange, brown or red rust mainly on the
    underneath side of leaves

47
Rust
48
Smut
  • A black, powdery disease that causes blisters
    that burst open releasing black spores

49
Smut
50
Wilt
  • A disease that blocks the uptake of water in
    plant stems causing plants to wilt

51
Wilt
52
Controlling Pests and Diseases
53
Disease Control
  • Preventing plant diseases is better than treating
    the diseases
  • Plant diseases must be identified before they can
    be treated

54
Environment
  • Warm temperatures and moist conditions in
    greenhouse plant production make most
    horticulture plant diseases worse because of
    environmental conditions that support
    disease-causing pathogens

55
Controlling Insects
  • Insects can be controlled using the following
    methods
  • biological
  • chemical
  • cultural
  • mechanical
  • natural
  • quarantine

56
Biological Control
  • Uses natural enemies such as birds, other
    insects, etc.

57
Chemical Control
  • The use of pesticides or insecticides
  • Insects must be killed when they are actively
    feeding or moving on the plant

58
Chemical Control
  • Contact poisons
  • affect the insects nervous system and must come
    into contact with the insect to be effective
  • Fumigants
  • poisonous gases released into an enclosed place
    so that insects breathe the gases

59
Chemical Control
  • Stomach poisons
  • sprayed on the plant surfaces or are taken into
    the plant through absorption.
  • The insect must suck the poison to get it into
    the stomach for this method to be effective.
  • Systemic poisons are more effective for
    controlling sucking insects.

60
Cultural Control
  • Involves sanitation, removing insect breeding and
    hiding areas and using insect resistant plant
    varieties

61
Mechanical Control
  • Uses physical control such as insect traps, using
    screens over fans and other openings, and washing
    plants with soapy water.

62
Natural Control
  • Methods include natural barriers such as rivers,
    woods, mountains and predators to control insects.

63
Quarantine
  • Physically isolates insects from healthy plants

64
IPM
  • A combination of control methods is called
    Integrated Pest Management or integrated control.
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