Keep eye on walnut trees with beetle holes, thousand cankers disease
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Steve Seybold, research entomologist with the U.S. Forest Service in Davis, Calif., traps beetles in seven orchard locations from Lake to Tulare counties to try to determine when the insect is the most active.
“The beetle really flies year round except for possibly December and January. Even then, they’ll fly when temperatures exceed 65-70 degrees,” he said.
Based on these results, Seybold says growers should remove diseased trees between December and February when the beetle is the least active. It’s a good idea to grind or burn wood debris that could harbor beetles and the fungus.
Hasey is co-leading the UCCE portion of the TCD orchard surveys with Richard Bostock of the UC Davis’ plant pathology department.
Farm advisers and members of Bostock’s lab have examined commercial walnut orchards in Yuba, Sutter, Colusa, Contra Costa, Lake, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Tulare, and Kings counties. By the end of this fall, they hope to examine orchards in San Benito, Merced, Glenn, Tehama, and Butte counties.
When possible, orchards have been selected for proximity to black walnuts to determine whether the beetle and disease are radiating out from the wild hosts, Hasey says. Orchards at least five-years-old on Paradox rootstock were chosen due to disease susceptibility.
Surveyors considered the disease incidence and rated the trees for disease severity.
Hasey says an analysis of the initial survey results by Mohammad Yaghmour of the Bostock lab found TCD more prevalent in the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley, followed by the Yolo-Solano-Yuba-Sutter area. In most orchards, the disease level was relatively low.
“We found that the disease is not really as high in most cases as we thought it might be, and often the trees with low severity are actually fine,” she said.
“With the higher severity, that’s when you start to see some dieback or trees dying. It appears they can tolerate some infection overall, at least this is what we’ve found so far.”
TCD is often found in trees already in decline or weakened by other stressors, including other diseases or incorrect irrigation. Hasey says these trees should be removed.
In a separate but related project, Seybold, associate project scientist Yigen Chen, and graduate students Stacy Hishinuma and Jackson Audley are conducting an experiment on four rows of the Chandler walnut variety at the Nickels Estate near Arbuckle to compare how walnut trees with and without crown gall respond to beetle feeding and TCD.
The project goal is to quantify how the pest complex affects nut production, Seybold says.
The three-year study, funded by the California Walnut Board, began earlier this year with the team marking and recording every beetle hole in the trees. They will monitor the insect’s movement and distribution in and around the orchard over a period of time.
In this study, Bruce Lampinen, UCCE specialist in nut tree canopy management, will monitor the water potential of the trees, canopy light interception, nut harvest weights, and nut quality.