NNY Ag Development Program

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Search Results for: extension

September 3, 2019 By karalynn

NNYADP Apple Research: Use Hail Netting to Exclude Pests?

Employees at a Clinton County orchard install hail netting to a row of apple trees. Photo: A. Galimberti, CCE Clinton County, NY

Plattsburgh, N.Y.; September 3, 2019. Real-time, regional in-orchard research funded by the farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program (NNYADP) is helping apple growers quickly respond to pests with the latest management practices. It also provides insight into practices that may or may not work to protect the NNY apple crop conservatively valued at $57 million.

“Pest management is one of the largest investments fruit growers must make in terms of time, labor, and materials to produce marketable fruit and maintain healthy trees,” says project leader Michael Basedow, a tree fruit specialist with the Cornell Cooperative Extension Eastern NY Commercial Horticulture Program, Plattsburgh, NY.

With a grant from the NNYADP, Basedow provided weekly pest scouting data to help growers quickly respond to orchard pests with appropriate pest management tactics. He also initiated a project to evaluate whether exclusion netting used for protecting apples from hailstorm damage might also protect the fruit from orchard pests.

A series of hailstorms in 2017 damaged the NNY region’s apple crop. One grower reported up to more than 60 percent of his acres suffered damage. Basedow says, “Growers selling hail-damaged fruit for juice that would otherwise have sold at retail prices can see as much as a 98 percent decrease in the economic value of their crop.”

Basedow worked with commercial growers in Clinton and Essex counties who had installed hail netting. Trials in France and Quebec, Canada, had showed success in limiting damage by codling moth and other orchard pests, but the use of drape-style netting had not been well-evaluated under northern NY orchard conditions.

“We are constantly looking at ways to increase the use of integrated pest management (IPM) practices that allow us to produce a commercially viable crop while also making the best use of growers’ time, labor, and money. We wanted to see if the hail netting might be an effective practice to add to our apple growers’ IPM toolbox,” Basedow said.

The research provided weekly trap data on four key apple pests in northern NY: codling moth, Oriental fruit moth, obliquebanded leafroller, and apple maggot.

“Results from the trial showed that traps in the trees under the netting caught significantly fewer of the four key pests compared to the unnetted trees, however,” Basedow says, “the pest pressure levels in 2018 for three of the four key pests was such that the feasibility of using hail netting for pest exclusion is still uncertain. The netting may help reduce pest numbers enough to reduce the total number of orchard sprays needed for some pests, such as apple maggot, where spray decisions are based on well-established economic thresholds.”

Basedow adds that the sites with the most effective pest exclusion were those where the hail netting was tightly tied to the lower limbs and trunks of the apple trees. The orchard with the best control applied the netting to trees grown to a tall spindle training system with the netting secured tightly to the trunks.

This NNYADP project provided more than 450 orchard businesses in northern and eastern NY with the weekly pest scouting data during the 2018 growing season. A like number of growers and fruit specialists attended meetings that included mention of this hail netting pest exclusion research. The full project report is posted on the NNYADP website at www.nnyagdev.org.


Funding for the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is supported by the New York State Legislature and administered by the New York State Department of Agriculture.

Filed Under: News & Press Releases

Research News & Reports

NNYADP Water Quality / Tile Drainage Research Results

 NNYADP Dairy Research Results
     Dairy Labor / Workforce Training Research Results
     Climate Adaptability Research for Cow and Calf Health
     Milking / Productivity Research Results: Adjust Automatic Cluster Remover

NNYADP Field Crops Research Results
      Biocontrol Nematodes Research and Protocol Results
      Whole Farm Nutrient Management Projects’ Results

NNYADP Local Foods / Horticultural Research Results
     “Super Fruits Research Results: Juneberry, Honeyberry, Aronia, Elderberry
      Tips for Selling at Wholesale Produce Auction: St. Lawrence Valley Produce Auction Study
      NNYADP Vegetable Research: Season Extension Opportunities: Mini Cabbages, Sprouting Broccoli

 NNYADP Livestock Research Results

NNYADP Maple, Birch and Honey Research Results
     Alternative Tubing Research Results (2020-2021)
     NNY “Sweet Tree” Cloning Research Results

NNYADP Bioenergy Crops Research Results

July 31, 2019 By karalynn

NNY Field Crop Survey: Real-Time Data, Trends Tracking

Field day participants scout a Northern New York soybean field with J. Keith Waldron of the New York State Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell University. Photo: NNYADP

July 31, 2019.  To help Northern New York farmers be alert to newly emerging field crop diseases and trends, the farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program (NNYADP) funds an annual field crop diagnosis and assessment project. The data produced by the survey is critical to farmers locally and statewide. The annual evaluations, revived in 2013, provide farmers with real-time alerts in the current growing season, and add to multi-year data tracking that identifies trends and indicates emerging and re-emerging challenges.

“Northern New York farmers are increasingly faced with important management decisions that require real-time knowledge of plant diseases. The regional survey provides data to help them select crop varieties with disease-resistance and plan management practices to most cost-effectively and efficiently respond to the current-day threats and year-to-year variability,” says project leader Michael E. Hunter, a Cornell University Cooperative Extension Regional Field Crops Specialist.

Hunter and Cornell University Cooperative Extension Regional Field Crops and Soils Specialist Kitty O’Neil collaborate with Cornell University Plant Pathologist Gary Bergstrom, Ph.D. to respectively detect potential issues and collect crop samples in the fields, and analyze them at the Bergstrom Lab at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

Thirty-two farms located across the six-county Northern New York region that includes Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Jefferson, Lewis and St. Lawrence counties participated in the most recently completed survey.

The NNYADP-funded survey also includes 19 sentinel cornfields and 18 sentinel fields of soybean, chosen to maximize the diversity of environments and cropping practices that can impact disease potential. In 2018, across the NNY survey area, seven corn diseases and six soybean diseases in total were identified and diagnosed.

“We are seeing an increasing number of growers using an integrated approach to managing field crop diseases on their farms. There are growers that are now paying closer attention to disease-resistant crop varieties, crop rotations, tillage practices, soil fertility management and fungicide selection based on the crop diseases identified in this regional survey,” Hunter notes.

The results of the 2019 field crops disease diagnosis and assessment survey will be posted on the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program website at www.nnyagdev.org and disseminated to growers, crop consultants, agribusinesses and extension field crops educators at crop meetings and field days locally and statewide.

Funding for the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is supported by the New York State Legislature and administered by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets.

Filed Under: News & Press Releases

July 17, 2019 By karalynn

Aug 1 Field Day: NNYADP-Funded Soybean Weed Control Research

August 1, (Rain Date: Aug 2), Watertown, NY
NNY Soybean Weed Control Field Day
Hosted by Freeman Farms, in soybean field on the corner of NY State Route 126 and Plank Road (County Route 163) in the town of Rutland. GPS Coordinates are Latitiude: 43.95038 Longitude: -75.7576. Free and open to the public. 1.25 NYS DEC pesticide applicator credits (Categories 1A, 10, 21) and CCA CEUs available.

Join Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Regional Field Crop Specialist Mike Hunter to discuss soybean weed control programs and take a guided walking tour through the soybean herbicide plots in the field. Over 25 pre, post, and two pass herbicide programs to view. This field day provides a chance to compare the various herbicide programs, learn about herbicide sites of action, and herbicide resistance management strategies.

This on-farm research project was made possible through funding from the Northern New York Agricultural Development Program

Info or in case of inclement weather on August 1: contact Mike Hunter at 315-778-8602 or meh27@cornell) to confirm if field day will be moved to the following day

Filed Under: News & Press Releases

July 11, 2019 By karalynn

Farmer Shares Photos as Tribute to NNYADP Research Success

NNY dairy farmer John D. Peck with his alfalfa mix crop, July 2019.

July 11, 2019.  As a testament to the success of the solution developed after many years of research that Cornell University entomologist Dr. Elson Shields and Research Support Specialist Tony Testa began at Peck Homestead Farm in Great Bend, NY, young farmer John D. Peck shares photos of his most recent alfalfa mix crop and notes, “The alfalfa that continues to grow well is a testament to the research done here after the devastation alfalfa snout beetle had caused.”

The Peck Homestead Farm family hosted alfalfa snout beetle on-farm research trials, funded by the farmer-driven Northern New York Agricultural Development Program, for more than two decades in support of the long-term commitment required to develop a science-based, field-proven response to the devastating crop pest. The crop loss at the farm was significantly impacting milk production loss.

July 2019: this mixed stand at Peck Homestead Farm includes alfalfa still protected by the biocontrol nematodes applied years ago as part of a NNYADP-funded research trial.

The development of the protocol for using native NY nematodes as a biocontrol for alfalfa snout beetle by Shields and Testa included an investigation into the pest’s history in Europe, creating a greenhouse protocol for rearing the biocontrol nematodes, and field trials. They pioneered and proved the protocol, showing that the nematodes will persist and spread (as they have at the Peck farm: see photo at left), making it possible for a single application to inexpensively provide relief from the pest that left unattended can destroy an entire field of alfalfa in a single season.

Following the many years of testing and proving the protocol on northern NY farms, Shields and Testa were able to attract additional funding from such groups as the New York Farm Viability Institute, Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program, and entities in Texas, New Mexico and other states to extend the biocontrol testing and use across New York State and well beyond not only to protect the alfalfa crops so valuable to the dairy and livestock industries, but other crops as well.

This groundbreaking science and research prompted a contingent of Russian agriculturalists to visit Northern New York and to specifically meet with Dr. Shields. On that visit, they also heard from John D.’s father, John E. Peck, about the early research efforts on their farm.

Cornell University Entomologist and Elson Shields, right, talks with Texas farmer Gary Frost as cups filled with biocontrol nematodes from New York await application on Frost’s farm in Dalhart, TX. Photo courtesy of Patrick Porter

Shields and Cornell Cooperative Extension NNY Field Crops Specialist Mike Hunter have received New York State Integrated Pest Management Awards for their work on alfalfa snout beetle management (July 11, 2019): https://nnyagdev.org/index.php/2019/07/11/congratulations-ipm-award-winners/

Click here for the research history of NNYADP-supported ASB biocontrol nematode research.

 

 

Filed Under: News & Press Releases

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