Abstract

Japanese maple scale, Lopholeucaspis japonica Cockerell (Hemiptera: Diaspididae), is an armored scale found on the bark of many woody nursery and landscape plants. Scale crawler and male flight activity was monitored in middle Tennessee in fields of cherry (Prunus serrulata Lindl. ‘Kwanzan’) for two seasons. Two generations of crawlers were observed, with a large peak of activity in late May and a second, less pronounced peak in August. Male flights occurred twice a year, in April and July. Spray and drench applications of insecticides were trialed in 2014 and 2015. Dormant oil applications reduced overwintering scale populations by 76%. Drench applications of imidacloprid in 2014 suppressed scale populations by 58% by four months following application and the following summer those same trees had no observable scale infestation. Summer trunk applications of pyriproxyfen were effective at managing scale crawlers while horticultural oil alone had no measurable effect. When scale populations were high at the outset of spring 2014, a dinotefuran drench application was ineffective after 90 days. Dinotefuran gave greater control in 2015 when scale populations were low prior to application. Based on these results, a multiple component program for field management of Japanese maple scale is recommended.

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