Abstract

Meadow vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus L.) populations, feeding activity, and damage to young apple (Malus domestica Borkh.) trees were monitored by direct observation, trap counts, and a feeding activity index in different groundcover management systems (GMSs) for five years in a New York orchard. Vole populations differed greatly among GMSs, with consistently higher populations and more damage to tree trunks in crownvetch (Coronilla varia L.), hay-straw mulch, and red fescue (Festuca rubra L.)sodgrass GMSs. Vole populations were highest in the fall and lowest during the spring seasons each year. Anticoagulant rodenticides and natural predation did not result in adequate control of voles in GMSs that provided favorable habitat for nesting and feeding of this pest. The percent of soil surface vegetation coverage was not, but the amount of groundcover biomass was, a significant predictor of vole populations and damage to trees, independent of groundcover vegetation species. Trunk applications of thiram fungicide were less effective than 40-cm-high plastic mesh trunk guards, but better than no protective measures for controlling vole depredation in groundcover management systems (GMSs) with high rodent populations. A combination of late fall vole trapouts, close and consistent mowing of orchard floor vegetation, tree trunk protection with mesh guards, ample surrounding habitat for natural predators of voles, and suppression of tree row groundcover species with herbicides provided adequate control of meadow voles without the use of rodenticides at this orchard.

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