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Pest Notes for Home & Landscape
Pest Notes for Home & Landscape
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Pocket Gophers: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Pocket gophers are burrowing rodents often invade yards and gardens, and feed on many garden crops, ornamental plants, vines, shrubs, and trees. A single gopher moving down a garden row can inflict considerable damage in a very short time.
Publication Number::
7433
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Poison Hemlock: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The leafy parts of poison hemlock have some resemblance to those of its relatives carrot, celery, and parsnip, as well as a variety of leafy herbs. It is, however, toxic to humans and other animals. Learn how to manage this vigorous, competitive weed.
Publication Number::
74162
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Poison Oak: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Poison oak or western poison oak has a distribution extending from British Columbia south to the Baja California peninsula. Contact with poison oak leaves or stems at any time of the year can cause an allergic response.
Publication Number::
7431
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Pokeweed: Pest Notes for Home and Garden
American pokeweed (
Phytolacca americana
) is a robust, non-woody shrub that is spreading in parts of California. Although sometimes eaten, the entire plant is poisonous and should be considered with extreme caution.
Publication Number::
74173
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Powdery Mildew on Fruits and Berries: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Powdery mildew is a common disease on many types of plants. It can be serious on woody species such as grapevines, caneberries, and fruit trees where it attacks new growth including buds, shoots, and flowers as well as leaves.
Publication Number::
7494
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Powdery Mildew on Ornamentals: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Powdery mildew can be serious on woody species such as rose, crape myrtle, and sycamore where it attacks new growth including buds, shoots, and flowers as well as leaves.
Publication Number::
7493
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Powdery Mildew on Vegetables: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
A wide variety of vegetable crops are affected by powdery mildews, including artichoke, beans, beets, carrot, cucumber, eggplant, lettuce, melons, parsnips, peas, peppers, pumpkins, radicchio, radishes, squash, tomatillo, tomatoes, and turnips.
Publication Number::
7406
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Psyllids: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Psyllids resemble miniature cicadas and are sometimes called jumping plantlice. Over 100 species occur on both native and introduced landscape plants in the United States, but each kind of psyllid feeds on only one plant species or closely related groups.
Publication Number::
7423
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Puncturevine: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Puncturevine
(Tribulus terrestris)
is an aptly named summer annual that thrives in hot, dry conditions. The seeds are enclosed in a hard case that can injure livestock, people, and pets when stepped on and can even puncture bicycle tires.
Publication Number::
74128
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Rabbits: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Rabbits are enjoyed by many people but they can be destructive to gardens and landscaped areas. The black-tailed hare or jackrabbit, the desert cottontail, and the brush rabbit are widespread and cause the majority of problems in California.
Publication Number::
7447
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Raccoons: Pest Notes for the Home and Landscape
Raccoons are omnivorous, eating both plants and animals. In urban settings, in addition to feeding on backyard fruits, nuts, and vegetables, they scavenge from garbage cans, compost piles, and pet food left outside overnight.
Publication Number::
74116
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Rats: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Rats are some of the most troublesome and damaging rodents. They consume and contaminate food, damage structures and property, and transmit parasites and diseases. In California the most troublesome rats are the roof rat and the Norway rat.
Publication Number::
74106
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Rattlesnakes: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The rattlesnake is Californiaās only native venomous snake. Six species are found in various areas of the state. These snakes are an important part of the ecosystem, feeding on rodents, birds, and other small animals.
Publication Number::
74119
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Red Imported Fire Ant: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
The red imported fire ant is new to California and has recently been found infesting residential and commercial areas in southern California. The spread of these ants has largely been a result of the movement of infested soil to uninfested areas.
Publication Number::
7487
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Redhumped Caterpillar: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Destructive numbers of the redhumped catepillar may be a problem in the Central Valley. Commonly attacked are liquidambar (sweet gum), walnut, and plum; it is also found on almond, apple, apricot, birch, cottonwood, cherry, pear, prune, redbud, and willow
Publication Number::
7474
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Removing Honey Bee Swarms and Established Hives: Pest Notes
A mass of honeybees in a tree or on part of your house can be unsettling. But a swarm doesn't have to be dangerous and can be taken care of quickly if you take the right steps and make the right calls. This publication shows just what you need to do.
Publication Number::
74159
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Roses in the Garden and Landscape: Cultural Practices and Weed Control
Through careful selection of plant varieties and management of environmental conditions with proper cultural practices, beautiful roses can be grown with a minimum of pest problems.
Publication Number::
7465
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Roses in the Garden and Landscape: Diseases and Abiotic Disorders
A variety of pathogens may attack roses including powdery mildew, rust, and black spot. In addition, roses may display similar symptoms from abiotic disorders that are the result of chemical toxicities, mineral deficiencies, or environmental problems.
Publication Number::
7463
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Russian Thistle: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Russian thistle, also known as tumbleweed, is a troublesome, difficult to control pest. In late fall and early winter, it becomes conspicuous as it breaks from the soil and is blown across highways and fields.
Publication Number::
7486
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Scales: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Scale insects can be serious pests on trees, shrubs, and other perennials. The impact of infestations depends on the scale species, the plant species and cultivar, environmental factors, and natural enemies.
Publication Number::
7408
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Scorpions: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Scorpions are nocturnal, predatory animals that feed on a variety of insects, spiders, centipedes, and other scorpions. Of the 70 or so species found in North America only the bark scorpion is considered dangerous to people.
Publication Number::
74110
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Silverfish and Firebrats: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
If the pages and bindings of books in your bookcase have been chewed on, suspect the look-alike household pests--silverfish and firebrats.
Publication Number::
7475
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Sixspotted Spider Mite on Plumeria: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
Learn to identify and control this common mite pest of plumeria (also called frangipani or lei flower), an increasingly popular ornamental in California gardens.
Publication Number::
74141
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Skunks: Pest Notes for Home and Landscape
There is cause for concern when skunks take up residence in an urban or suburban area because in California they are primary carriers of rabies.
Publication Number::
74118
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