These are the two species of armoured scales on avocados in New Zealand, although internationally latania scale is the most common scale on avocados. It is very difficult to pick these closely related species apart, and the notes below apply to both.
Armoured scales are largely a cosmetic and market access problem which do not affect production or the eating quality of fruit. Market access should cease to be a problem as Quarantine Authorities adopt the approach of Pest Risk Analysis, because these species are virtually universal. However latania scale is not recognised from Japan and will become more important as a fumigation problem if this market develops. Even though scales are small and confined to the skin, large numbers on a fruit are unsightly and may lead to consumer rejection. They can be very conspicuous as Hass fruit darken. The scale body will remains stuck to the fruit even when killed by a spray.
Armoured scales are found on the wood and leaves of avocado trees as well as on fruit, with most movement onto fruit occurring from February to May. Both species are found on a very wide range of plants, including many shelter trees. Lombardy poplars and taraire are examples of shelter trees that can be very heavily infested. (Taraire is a native tree related to tawa and found mainly north of Auckland.) If you have a scale problem coming from the shelter it is critical that you target the shelter as well as the avocado trees. If the shelter is a playing a major role in your problem the avocado trees adjacent to it will generally be more heavily infested than those further away. This is because armoured scale crawlers do not produce silk threads for dispersal, but simply drift in gentle winds.
Life cycle
Armoured scales are sap-sucking insects that live under protective coverings (caps) made of wax, protein and other substances. These caps protect the scale insects not only from the weather but also from sprays. Scales, like all insects, grow in a series of stages or instars. At the end of each instar the scale moults, and the shed skin is added to the inside of the cap, changing its colour when viewed from below and providing an easy way to age scale insects. Adult scales produce eggs that hatch almost immediately into crawlers. Eggs are not laid in batches but are produced a few at a time over an extended period of several months. Thus generations overlap. There are usually only two generations each year, so that scale populations develop slowly. On warm sites or in seasons with a protracted warm autumn, there will be a partial third generation in late autumn.
First Instars - Crawlers are the only mobile stage in the scale life cycle. Once settled an armoured scale stays in the one spot for the rest of its life. When the crawlers settle they are known as white caps because the underside of the cap is white. Both crawlers and white caps are first instar scales and many die during this stage.
Second Instars - When the settled scale moults to the second instar, the shed skin added to the underside of the cap changes the colour to a yellow or light tan colour. The actual colour varies with scale species, latania scale being lighter than the same instar of greedy scale.
Third Instars - The moulted skin of the second instar gives the cap a darker brown appearance when viewed from below. As the scale grows the cap becomes uneven, particularly in greedy scale. Eventually eggs form, and the scale are then said to have reached the Mature or adult phase. No males are known from these two species in New Zealand.
Control
Control of scale on avocados aims to prevent significant numbers of scale settling on the fruit. At present we know of no differences between the 2 species that affects control. The protective cap makes armoured scales intrinsically difficult to kill. Crawlers as the only exposed stage are more easily killed. However crawlers are not produced all at once as in some soft scales, but trickled out continuously over the several months that an adult scale can live. So coverage, to reach all the cracks and crannies where scale can be found, is more important than timing.
Greenhouse thrips Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis is a major pest on avocados due to the fruit scarring caused by their feeding. Damage begins where fruits touch, or where a leaf touches a fruit and can result in significant quantities of fruit being rejected from export. Both adults and larvae cause this brown russetting, but adults are more damaging. Leaves are also damaged, although this is not thought to be significant. Dense populations of adults and larvae can develop under favourable conditions. Greenhouse thrips is another insect pest that is spread widely around the world and feeds a very wide range of host plants. It was first recorded in New Zealand in the 1930s. They are abundant throughout much of the North Island, and can be found as far south as Nelson.
Life cycle
Adult greenhouse thrips are black, about 1.5mm long, with yellowish legs and two pairs of narrow, fringed wings that are held along the body appearing as a pale stripe down the middle of the abdomen. Newly emerged adults are brown and darken with age. Males have not been found in New Zealand. The adults live for up to three months and lay 2-3 eggs per day.
Eggs (0.3 mm long) are laid singly inside the leaf or fruit tissue. When each hatches an almost transparent larva emerges, which becomes white or pale yellow as it grows. There are two actively feeding larval stages, followed by two non-feeding stages, the propupa and pupa. Both pupal stages can be distinguished by the wing buds they have. Feeding larvae carry droplets of liquid excrement on the tips of their abdomens. These are a defence against predators, but if not used are deposited over the feeding site where they harden as tarry blobs. They are distinctive of greenhouse thrips.
The complete life cycle takes less than 5 weeks under optimum conditions, so that there are a number of generations each year. Both cold and hot weather limit population growth, as does dryness. Unfortunately the warm humid conditions in Northland and the Bay of Plenty during late summer and autumn approach being ideal for greenhouse thrips, so that big populations can develop quite rapidly.
Habits
Greenhouse thrips prefer to feed between touching surfaces of leaves and fruit, or under spider webbing. Heavy infestations lead to thrips feeding over the entire surface of fruit and leaves. The leaves become bleached and fresh damage to the fruit appears silvered. This ages to a brown russet littered with characteristic black spots of excrement. Young and mature fruit are equally susceptible to damage.
Natural enemies
Parasites: Thripobius semiluteus was imported from California and released in the Bay of Plenty and Northland on selected avocado and citrus orchards over the last few years. Thripobius is a small wasp that parasitises the larval stages of greenhouse thrips. It has successfully reduced pest numbers overseas, but the success and extent of its establishment in New Zealand has not been determined. It is also now available commercially from Zonda Resources.
Predators: The few recorded predators appear to have little impact on population levels of greenhouse thrips in New Zealand.
Control
Greenhouse thrips is susceptible to a number of sprays, including both older broad-spectrum products, and some newer products. However the eggs in the tissue are protected from sprays so that if populations of thrips are large or conditions favour a rapid increase, 2 sprays at about a 3-week interval may be required to give effective control.SIX-SPOTTED MITE
Six-spotted mite (6SM) Eotetrancyhus sexmaculatus can cause extensive premature leaf-fall. This spider mite is found in all the major avocado-growing regions in this country, but populations are greatest in the Whangarei and Far North regions. Although 6SM was first found in New Zealand in 1953, it began to be of concern only relatively recently, rising to become a major pest in the last few years. The reason for the change in pest status is unknown. There has been little research on 6SM in New Zealand and the following account uses both local and overseas information.
Life Cycle
Adult 6SM are very small, approximately 0.3 mm in length. Adults are generally a light yellow colour with a number of irregular dark markings along the body. Despite the name, there are not necessarily 6 clear spots, and number and shape of the markings can vary considerably. Each adult female can lay 25-40 eggs over a 10-20 day period.
The shiny, pale white or cream coloured eggs are globular with a delicate stalk on the upper surface. They are laid singly on the lower surface of the leaves where the adults feed, and take 5 days to 3 weeks to hatch depending on temperature. Once emerged the immature mites pass through a number of stages before becoming adults. There are 3 immature feeding stages, larva, protonymph, and deutonymph, which are each followed by an short stationary resting stage called a photochrysalis, during which the mite moults. The larval development stages can take as little as 8-12 days during the summer temperatures in California, but local evidence is for a slower rate of development in this country.
The whole life cycle takes place on the underside of avocado leaves. As with other spider mites, 6SM disperse through the environment by drifting in air currents, and may also be transported on orchard equipment. Infestations in New Zealand can be localised with considerable variation among trees within a block.
Damage
Six-spotted mites feed on the undersides of leaves, sucking out the contents of cells. Initially this damage appears as a purplish discolouration on the underside along the main veins. Sometimes damage is visible from the top surface of the leaf as pale blotchy areas, and occasionally leaf distortion occurs. However leaf drop is the most obvious sign of serious 6SM infestations. Although in California leaf drop is said to occur when populations reach an average of 5-10 adult mites per leaf, experience in New Zealand suggests that much higher populations can generally be tolerated here. There does not appear to be a simple link between mite numbers and leaf drop.
Control
Overseas 6SM rarely requires intervention on avocados, with numbers being successfully contained by a range of natural enemies.
Chemical control
Thorough spray coverage of the underside of the leaves is essential with any product targeting control of 6SM. Avid (abamectin) and D-C-Tron Plus (mineral oil) are registered for this use, and Mit-é-mec is seeking registration. Growers also report control of this mite can still be achieved with some organophosphate sprays, which is unusual for a spider mite. Avid gives better and more persistent control when sprayed onto young leaves than old hardened ones, and is normally used with 0.5% mineral oil added.
To minimise the risk of 6SM developing resistance to chemicals, a Resistance Management Strategy has been developed. Do not use one product, or products from the same chemical group, more frequently than recommended in the Resistance Management Strategy. If more applications are required, products with different modes of actions must be used.