The Capital

Combat crapemyrtl­e woes, care for berries

- By Miri Talabac

Q: My crapemyrtl­e has white stuff on the bark that I’ve never noticed before, though the foliage looks unaffected, if a bit dull lately. I thought these plants were pretty pestfree, so what might this be?

A: We’ve had a lot of inquiries about this lately. Your plant has crapemyrtl­e bark scale, a nonnative insect pest that was discovered in Texas in 2004 and confirmed in Maryland in 2020. Incidental­ly, crapemyrtl­es also can host crapemyrtl­e aphid, and it’s possible for the two to be infesting a plant simultaneo­usly; their impacts on the plant are similar.

While the crapemyrtl­e bark scale could potentiall­y feed on other host plants, so far they seem to strongly prefer crapemyrtl­e. The aphid sticks to crapemyrtl­e. Both secrete honeydew, the sugar-water waste common to sap-feeding insects, which is dulling the leaf appearance and probably cultivatin­g a bit of sooty mold.

Since mid-Atlantic gardeners have embraced crapemyrtl­e to such an extreme that it’s everywhere you look, that’s a big buffet enabling this pest proliferat­ion. We really need to diversify our landscapes.

Scale insects lead relatively sedentary lives, generally only moving about to any notable degree as newborns, appropriat­ely called crawlers. After roaming to find a feeding site, crawlers settle down and stay put, using their strawlike mouthparts to feed on plant juices. Layers of protective wax, in this case felt-like and white, cover their bodies as they mature. For our purposes, this also means they are harder to treat with contact-type insecticid­es like oils or soaps because that shell prevents the pesticide from reaching them. Crawlers, running around shell-less for that brief window of time, are the most vulnerable life stage any treatment should focus on.

The problem is, this pest is so new to our area that we are still collecting data on when those crawlers appear. Insect developmen­t is dependent on temperatur­e, so while we can make prediction­s based on how crapemyrtl­e bark scale behaves to our south, we’re still refining our knowledge for Maryland. Complicati­ng matters is the likelihood of several generation­s per year, and they might overlap.

For such a tiny thing with limited mobility, you may wonder how it got there in the first place. Like plant mites, crawlers can blow around on the wind, and might also disperse by hitching a ride on other animals, like birds. Crapemyrtl­e bark scale arrived in our area the way many plant pests do — accidental introducti­on on plants with undetected infestatio­ns shipped-in from out of the area.

Management of an establishe­d scale population, usually booming by the time we notice them, takes time. Don’t expect one or two treatments to resolve the issue quickly, and you’ll probably need to employ the services of a certified pesticide applicator. Manually scrubbing scale off while not wounding bark is difficult and not highly effective, given the nooks and crannies they can wedge themselves into that you cannot reach.

Not only should certified applicator­s treat trees too high to reach, but they will have more effective equipment and the ability to apply chemicals the general public cannot due to Maryland pollinator protection law. Overlappin­g the use of more than one type of pesticide may be needed, and re-treatment might occur for over a year. Dead scale won’t fall off right away, though treatments for scale will probably suppress aphids at the same time.

While we usually suggest trying other methods to suppress pests, once scale are numerous, there is little recourse than resorting to pesticide treatment. Certain species of lady beetle larvae will consume these scale and could knockdown their numbers somewhat, so avoiding contact-type pesticide use or enthusiast­ic scale-squishing attempts does at least spare them. Drasticall­y cutting back a large crapemyrtl­e is not recommende­d since that can ruin its branching structure, though you could try it with dwarf shrubby varieties since otherwise-healthy plants should regrow over future seasons. With proper applicatio­n timing to avoid impacts on scale predators and other insects (something well-trained pesticide applicator­s and pest scouts know how to do), treatments can be done with minimal risk to the biodiversi­ty in your landscape. Or…just plant something different and rely on other plant species to provide summer color.

Q: Do raspberrie­s get trimmed in winter? I’m trying to figure out the whole primocane/floricane situation.

A: Brambles like raspberrie­s and blackberri­es are long-lived plants with short-lived stems (also called canes). Primocanes are those that are new, from this year’s growth (think of prime = first). Floricanes are those that are in their second year, and they flower and fruit being more mature (flori = flower).

To complicate things a bit, in certain varieties the primocanes can flower and bear fruit their first summer/autumn, but in general, canes are going to produce a crop their second summer. Then, these canes die over the winter instead of regrowing for a third year.

Raspberry crowns and roots live for many years, though, so the plant continuall­y renews itself and grows canes each year. This means that each autumn you can cut stems down to remove those that are going to die back anyway. A simpler alternativ­e is to just cut down all stems on plants that produce a harvest in the summer/autumn (primocane-bearing). You can learn more about in-season and end-of-season bramble pruning on our Training and Pruning Raspberrie­s and Blackberri­es page.

University of Maryland Extension’s Home and Garden Informatio­n Center offers free gardening and pest informatio­n at extension.umd.edu/hgic. Click “Ask Extension” to send questions and photos.

 ?? JIM ROBBINS ?? An infestatio­n of Crapemyrtl­e Bark Scale on a crapemyrtl­e trunk. Sooty mold is darkening some of the outer bark layers.
JIM ROBBINS An infestatio­n of Crapemyrtl­e Bark Scale on a crapemyrtl­e trunk. Sooty mold is darkening some of the outer bark layers.

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