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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Prune
Pacific Flatheaded Borer
Scientific name: Chrysobothris mali
(Reviewed 6/06,
updated 6/06)
In this Guideline:
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Pacific flatheaded borer adults are
generally present in May and June and are occasionally found in pheromone traps
used to monitor other pests. When spring months are warm, adult beetles may be
seen as early as March or early April. Adult beetles are about 0.4 inch long
with a dark bronze body and coppery spots on the wing covers. Beetles lay eggs
in injured or weakened areas on the tree and larvae bore into the wood. A
full-grown larva is
light colored, with a prominent, flat enlargement of the body just behind the
head. There is one generation each year.
Pacific flatheaded borers are attracted to
diseased or injured limbs, such as those affected by sunburn, scale insects,
bacterial canker, mechanical injuries, or major pruning cuts. Larvae excavate
large caverns just beneath the bark and bore tunnels deep into the tree's
cambium tissues. Excavations are usually filled with finely powdered sawdust.
Injury by this borer will cause sap to flow, and the affected area will appear
as a wet spot on the bark. Later, these areas may crack and expose the mines.
Feeding by Pacific flatheaded borers may cause a portion of the bark to die, or
may girdle and kill young trees or scaffold limbs.
Flatheaded borers often invade sunburned areas on
the trunk of newly planted first-year trees. Wrap or paint the tree
trunk from 2 feet above to 1 inch below the soil line with white, interior,
water-based paint or whitewash to protect the trunk from sunburn. One treatment
may not be sufficient, especially on the side of the tree trunk exposed to the
sun. In older trees the best way to avoid infestations is to keep trees sound
and vigorous. Prune out all badly infested wood, and shred it or haul it to the dump
before the growing season starts. Protect sunburned limbs with white latex paint.
Insecticide treatments are not recommended for this insect.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Prune
UC ANR Publication 3464
Insects and Mites
C. Pickel, UC IPM Program, Sutter/Yuba counties
F. J. A. Niederholzer, UC Cooperative Extension, Sutter/Yuba counties
W. H. Olson, UC Cooperative Extension, Butte County
F. G. Zalom, Entomology, UC Davis
R. P. Buchner, UC Cooperative Extension, Tehama County
W. H. Krueger, UC Cooperative Extension Glenn County
Acknowledgment for contributions to the insects and mites section:
W. O. Reil, UC Cooperative Extension Solano/Yolo counties
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