plant detectives

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PLANT DETECTIVES

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Plant Detectives. Directions. Consider the information presented in each scenario What is useful? What is not useful? What is missing? Based on the information provided determine a possible solution for the client Use an IPM approach for each of your answers. Goal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plant Detectives

PLANT DETECTIVES

Page 2: Plant Detectives

Directions

• Consider the information presented in each scenario– What is useful?– What is not useful?– What is missing?

• Based on the information provided determine a possible solution for the client

• Use an IPM approach for each of your answers

Page 3: Plant Detectives

Goal

• Based on information provided by client, determine possible cause(s) and present range of solutions client can choose.– You are NOT telling the client what to do – You are educating the client on the control

options available

Page 4: Plant Detectives

What you need:

• N3959 or other access to publications

Page 5: Plant Detectives

When you see these:

• After you have come up with your own answers, listen to our suggested reply to the client.

• Click on these icons when you see them in the presentation.– Must be connected to

the internet

Page 6: Plant Detectives

PLANT DETECTIVESHerbaceous Plants

Page 7: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

It’s July and Mr. Green is highly perturbed with all the garden phlox he inherited from his mother. It is now covered with a white coating and is losing leaves.

Page 8: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

It’s planted on the east side of his home packed in with many other plants. He irrigates one evening a week using an overhead sprinkler. He’s fertilized with fish emulsion three times so far this season.

Page 9: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

•What is most likely wrong with this plant?• Using an IPM strategy,

what options would you give Mr. Green?

Discuss these questions before continuing to answer on next slide

Page 10: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

Powdery mildew on phlox– http://learningstore.uwex.edu/Assets/pdfs/A2404.pdf

• Whitish growth is the fungus growing and producing spores on both upper and lower leaf surfaces.

• High humidity promotes disease.

POWDERY MILDEW is one of the few diseases you can diagnose own your own –

most have to be sent to the lab for confirmation.

Page 11: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

Management options include:• Replant with resistant cultivar• Ample spacing to allow

airflow• Change watering practices• Sanitation• Fungicides

Page 12: Plant Detectives

Scenario 1

Powdery mildew on different plants is caused by different species of fungi.These fungi affect different annuals, perennial, herbaceous and woody plants. The powdery mildew on Mr. Green’s phlox is not the same as powdery mildew on his lilacs, roses, squash or beebalm, but they occur under the same conditions.

Page 13: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2

Sharon Coneflower is aghast that her prized roses are suddenly being ravaged. She sees clusters of dark-colored “bugs” in the flowers and on hole-ridden leaves.

Page 14: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2

• What do you think is causing this problem?

• Using an IPM strategy, what options would you give Ms. Coneflower?

Discuss these questions before continuing to answer on next slide

Page 15: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2

Japanese beetle– http://hort.uwex.edu/articles/japanese-beetle

• A scarab beetle from Asia• Slightly less than ½” long• Shiny, metallic green & copper-

colored with white spots on edge of body

Page 16: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2• Roses are a favorite food• Adults feed on leaves and flowers, consuming entire petals• Adults congregate in large numbers, lured in by pheromones = a

chemical substance produced and released into the environment by an animal that affects the behavior or physiology of others of its species.

Page 17: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2

Management options include:• Hand removal• Trapping• Insecticides

Page 18: Plant Detectives

Scenario 2

Japanese beetles attack a lot of other plants besides roses (over 300 species!). Some favorites include grapes, Virginia creeper, linden and birch trees, raspberries, and many garden flowers.

Page 19: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

Mrs. Smith brought in a sample to the UWEX office of a low-growing weed with purple flowers that is crawling all through her flower beds. It’s been getting worse every year.

Page 20: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

• What weed do you think this is?

• Using an IPM strategy, what options would you give Mrs. Smith?

Discuss these questions before continuing to answer on next slide

Page 21: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

Creeping Charliehttp://hort.uwex.edu/sites/default/files/Creeping%20Charlie.pdf

• An herbaceous perennial.• Spreads by seed and by creeping

stems that grow along the ground.• Thrives in moist, shady spots.

Page 22: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

Management options include:• Increase light levels • Water less frequently• Remove by hand• Herbicides – Spot spray– Timing

Page 23: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

Further into the conversation with her, she mentions she has a small dog and is worried chemicals will hurt it. Would that change the answer you give her?

Page 24: Plant Detectives

Scenario 3

• Read the label• Re-entry time• Organic options• Keep dog out of

the flower bed!