Showing posts with label wireworm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wireworm. Show all posts

Reminder - Upcoming Field Day!

Friday, July 8, 2022

 



On July 11th from 1- 3 pm, please join Perennia Specialists at Soil Mates Farm in Barss Corner for a tailgate meeting.  We will discuss compost, compost analysis, cover crops, veg and berry production, and wireworm management. Our team will be on hand to answer any production questions, so bring pictures, analysis results and samples.


Do you have a compost source that you find works well for you? Bring a bucket for a compost show and tell!


To register for this event, please click here.


This event is being held as part of the On-Farm Climate Action Fund (OFCAF) program. The goals of the program are to encourage on-farm sequestration of carbon and reduction in greenhouse gases through the implementation of improved nitrogen management, enhanced cover crop adoption, and the normalization of rotational grazing. For more info on the OFCAF program, please visit ofcaf.perennia.ca

Upcoming Field Day - Compost and Cover Crops

Friday, June 17, 2022

 


On July 11th from 1- 3 pm, please join Perennia Specialists at Soil Mates Farm in Barss Corner for a tailgate meeting.  We will discuss compost, compost analysis, cover crops, veg and berry production, and wireworm management. Our team will be on hand to answer any production questions, so bring pictures, analysis results and samples.


Do you have a compost source that you find works well for you? Bring a bucket for a compost show and tell!


To register for this event, please click here.


This event is being held as part of the On-Farm Climate Action Fund (OFCAF) program. The goals of the program are to encourage on-farm sequestration of carbon and reduction in greenhouse gases through the implementation of improved nitrogen management, enhanced cover crop adoption, and the normalization of rotational grazing. For more info on the OFCAF program, please visit ofcaf.perennia.ca

April Shower Bring May... Insect Pests

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

As we head into late May, things are finally feeling like spring and the soil is warming up. With warmer soils come more productive growing days, but also a cozier habitat for pests, including wireworm!

This time of year, wireworms move up to the warmer top layers of soil, feeding on newly seeded or transplanted crops. In fields you know to be problematic areas for wireworm, consider growing a less susceptible crop and practicing crop rotation. Consider cover crops such as brown mustard and buckwheat to combat existing populations. Avoid planting highly susceptible crops such as cereals or potatoes in problematic areas.

Wireworm attacking a lettuce transplant. Photo courtesy Rosalie Gillis-Madden, Perennia.

For more information about wireworms, including how to set up a bait trap, check out Perennia’s new wireworm fact sheet.


Wireworms in Nova Scotia

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Wireworms in transplants
For those of you who missed Dr. Christine Noronha's presentation on wireworms last week, you can find her presentation here

While many areas in Nova Scotia thankfully do not report wireworm problems, there are definitely high populations in some fields.  Last spring, we set traps in a few fields around the province.  Below is a graph from a vegetable field in Colchester County, showing high numbers of Agriotes sputator, one of the more voracious click beetle (adult wireworm) species.  Click beetle flight happens earlier in the warmer parts of the province such as the Valley.

Click beetle catch in Colchester County, 2016.

Perennia has set out some click beetle pheromone traps again this year, and we just collected our first sample.  Below is a photo of our first "haul" from Annapolis County.  On the left is A. obscurus, the middle is A. sputator, and on the right is A. lineatus.  Pheromone traps only attract males, so do not reduce the click beetle/wireworm population, but do give us a good idea of pest levels.  

May 23, 2017 click beetle catch from Annapolis County.

Wireworm updates

Monday, May 8, 2017



Dr. Christine Noronha is an entomologist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in PEI with a particular interest in wireworms.  She will be visiting Nova Scotia this week and will give an overview of wireworms and their lifecycle (similar to last year’s presentation), as well as the most recent updates and highlights from her research into this pest. 

The presentation will take place at the Kentville Research Station (32 Main Street, Kentville) on Friday, May 12th, 2017 at 9 am in the Perennia Training Room.  I know it’s a busy time of year, but we hope you can join us! 

Wireworm Managment with Dr. Christine Noronha

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

We were fortunate to have Dr. Christine Noronha from AAFC visit the Kentville Research Station in early May.  She was kind enough to share her presentation on Wireworm Management with us.  Please click on the above link to access the presentation.

Wireworm traps are being set around Nova Scotia to identify what species of click beetle we have here. 

NELT Wireworm Traps

Friday, May 6, 2016



The Noronha Elaterid Light Trap (NELT).
In an attempt to manage the wireworm problem, a new device has been invented by Dr. Christine Noronha, an Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada entomologist.  The NELT (Noronha Elaterid Light Trap) trap is composed of a solar-powered garden lamp, a small cage, and a white plastic cup. The cup is filled with a few centimetres of water with a few drops of dish soap.  The white cup is buried in the soil so that the lip is level with the ground, and the light shines into it. The light attracts the click beetles (both male and female) that emerge from the ground in May and June.  The beetles fall into the cup and drown.  Last year in one field, Dr. Noronha caught 3,000 females in ten of her traps.  Each female beetle can lay 100-200 eggs, so every death counts!

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguSwqOTUIdKAib9rJBS7UtjxqRJense03jSBFKpQXBMN22ncmFcK650Mo17Wh5xjp31zohR9Se8eL7Km0DKUO4IGVEz_5bhfcR9k_sJ11-dgixNkp-Pn9YnzprTkOr0Pxn2LgxOH8A4Yj0/s1600/IMG_1982.JPG
Note proximity of light to cup.
The traps can be left in the ground from mid-to-late May to mid-to-late June, with the cup/water being changed periodically. The traps have shown tremendous promise in trials, and are set to undergo more testing to determine the recommended field spacing. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is in the process of trademarking the trap name and design, and is now looking for a manufacturer to mass produce the trap. The goal is to have the traps avaialble to farmers in the spring of 2017.



Similar solar power lights can be found fairly inexpensively at your local garden store.
This post was written in part by Jessica MacDonald, Perennia's 2015-2016 summer student.