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Pest Notes for Home & Landscape
Pest Notes for Home & Landscape
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California Oakworm: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The California oakworm is one of many species of caterpillar that feed on oaks in California. Damage is most common on coast live oak in the San Francisco Bay area and Monterey Bay region; but outbreaks can occur in many parts of the state.
Publication Number::
7422
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Carpenter Ants: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Carpenter ants are capable of damaging wood in buildings and other structures. They cause problems mainly in mountainous and in forested rural areas along the central and northern coastlines of California; they may also invade buildings in urban locations
Publication Number::
7416
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Carpenter Bees: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Carpenter bees build nests in wood, creating galleries that can weaken structures; however, they rarely cause severe damage. People may be frightened by carpenter bees because of their large size, their similarity to bumble bees, and their annoying noise.
Publication Number::
7417
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Carpenterworm: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Carpenterworm is a common wood-boring insect that can cause significant damage to trees. Trees commonly infested include willow, ash, ornamental pears, black locust, cottonwood, maple, apricot, fruiting pear, birch, oak, and American elms.
Publication Number::
74105
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Carpet Beetles: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Carpet beetles are pests in warehouses, homes, museums, and other locations where suitable food exists. In California, three species of these beetles cause serious damage to fabrics, carpets, furs, stored foods, and preserved specimens.
Publication Number::
7436
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Catchweed Bedstraw: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Catchweed bedstraw is a troublesome agricultural weed that also shows up in the garden, where it competes for water and nutrients. The tiny, curved hairs on stem and leaf help bedstraw to form a dense mat. Learn to identify and manage this weed.
Publication Number::
74154
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Chickweed: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Two species of chickweed, common
(Stellaria media)
and sticky
(Cerastium glomeratum)
, are widespread in California. Both are winter annuals that grow easily in gardens, low-maintenance lawns, and agricultural areas.
Publication Number::
74129
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Citrus Leafminer: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Citrus leafminer larvae cause damage to new leaves on citrus plants and are particularly troublesome on younger trees. Learn how to control this pest using natural and chemical methods.
Publication Number::
74137
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Clearwing Moths: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The larvae of several species of clearwing moths are important wood-boring pests in landscapes. Hosts include alder, ash, birch, fir, oak, pine, poplar, sycamore, willow, and stone fruit trees such as apricot, cherry, peach, and plum.
Publication Number::
7477
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Cliff Swallows: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Swallows, particularly cliff swallows,
Hirundo pyrrhonota
, often live in close proximity to people. While enjoyable to watch, cliff swallows nesting in colonies on buildings and other structures can become a nuisance.
Publication Number::
7482
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Clothes Moths: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The webbing clothes moth and the casemaking clothes moth are occasional fabric pests in California. They tend to hide when disturbed, and for this reason, infestations are not usually noticed until the damaged articles are found.
Publication Number::
7435
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Clovers: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Clover can be a concern in turfgrass or landscaped areas.
Publication Number::
7490
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Cockroaches: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Cockroaches may become pests in our homes and landscape.
Las cucarachas pueden ser plagas en nuestros hogares y paisajes.
Publication Number::
7467
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Codling Moth: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Codling moth,
Cydia (Laspeyresia) pomonella
, is a serious insect pest of apples, pears, and English walnuts.
Publication Number::
7412
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Common Groundsel: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Common groundsel or old-man-of-the-spring is found throughout California. It can cause chronic liver poisoning to horses, cattle, and swine, even if only a small amount is eaten over a few weeks.
Publication Number::
74130
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Common Knotweed: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Common knotweed, also called wiregrass or doorweed, is an annual species most often found in compacted soils. It is particularly well adapted to the winter and early spring rainfall pattern throughout California.
Publication Number::
7484
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Common Purslane: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Common purslane is a weedy summer annual that invades gardens, low-maintenance lawns, commercial orchards, and vegetable crop production areas. It is particularly well adapted to the warm, moist conditions found in irrigated sites.
Publication Number::
7461
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Conenose Bugs: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Conenose bugs are members of the family Reduviidae, commonly called assassin bugs. Most members of this family are predators of other insects, but the conenose, also called kissing bugs, are bloodsucking parasites of a wide variety of animals and humans.
Publication Number::
7455
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Cottony Cushion Scale: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Cottony cushion scale can infest many woody ornamentals and certain crops. Common hosts in California are citrus, cocculus, nandina, and pittosporum. Its cottony egg sac and profuse honeydew production make cottony cushion scale easy to spot.
Publication Number::
7410
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Coyotes: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Coyotes have a reputation for causing trouble that goes back thousands of years. They are still at it today, damaging livestock and irrigation equipment and even straying into suburban areas. Learn to recognize coyotes and where to turn for help.
Publication Number::
74135
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Crabgrass: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Crabgrass is a common weed that almost everyone knows. There are two species of crabgrass common in California: smooth crabgrass and large or hairy crabgrass. Crabgrass also has many other names including crowfoot grass and summer grass.
Publication Number::
7456
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Creeping Woodsorrel and Bermuda Buttercup: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Creeping woodsorrel is a major weed in lawns, flower beds, nurseries, gardens, and greenhouses. A related species, Bermuda buttercup, is grown as an ornamental. Once planted it spreads throughout a garden, competing with other plants.
Publication Number::
7444
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Dallisgrass: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Dallisgrass,
Paspalum dilatatum
, is a warm-season perennial bunch grass that was introduced into the United States from South America in the 1800s for use as a forage plant. It is now a troublesome weed that has naturalized throughout much of California.
Publication Number::
7491
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Damping-Off Diseases in the Garden: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Damping-off diseases can attack seeds before they germinate, kill shoots before they emerge, or rot the stems of seedlings at the soil line. Find out how to guard against these insidious diseases that can stop your garden before it even starts.
Publication Number::
74132
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