APPLY PESTICIDES CORRECTLY
A GUIDE FOR COMMERCIAL APPLICATORS
 ORNAMENTAL AND
     TURFGRASS
   PEST CONTROL
    U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
      OFFICE OF PESTICIDE PROGRAMS
       WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460

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    TABLE  OF  CONTENTS
                                       Page
Acknowledgments 	    1
Preface  	    1
Ornamentals 	    2
  Introduction  	    2
  Disease Agents 	    2
  Weeds  	    3
  Insects and Mites	    4
  Vertebrate Pests	    5
Turfgrass 	    5
  Introduction   	    5
  Disease Agents 	    6
  Weeds  	    7
  Insects  	    8
  Vertebrate Pests	    9
Phytotoxicity	    9
Environmental Concerns  	    9
Protecting Animals and People	   10
Application  	   10
Area Measurements  	   10
Weights and Measures	   11
                    1976
                      i

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
This guide has been developed by North Carolina
State University under U.S. Environmental Protec-
tion Agency (EPA) contract number 68-01-2903.
This contract was issued by the Training Branch,
Operations Division, Office of Pesticide Programs,
EPA. The leader of this group effort was Robert L.
Robertson, North Carolina State University. Editors
were Mary Ann Wamsley,  EPA,  and Donna M.
Vermeire, North Carolina State University.

Contributors were:
John F. Ahrens, Connecticut  Agricultural Experi-
  ment Station
Jack D. Butler, Colorado State University
Huston B. Couch, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
  State University
Douglas   Gaydon,    Environmental    Protection
  Agency, Region IV, Atlanta, Georgia
William  M. Hoffman, Environmental  Protection
  Agency, Washington, D.C.
Palmer Maples,  Jr., Golf Course  Superintendents
  Association of America, Atlanta, Georgia
Richard L.  Miller, The Ohio State University
Federal  regulations  establish general and  specific
standards that you must meet before you can use
certain pesticides. Your State will provide material
which you may study to help you meet the general
standards.

This guide contains  basic information to help you
meet the specific standards for applicators who are
engaged in ornamental and turfgrass pest control.
Because the guide was prepared to cover the entire
nation, some  information important to  your State
may not be included. The State agency in charge of
your training can provide the other materials you
should study.

This guide will give you information about:
• recognition and control of ornamental pests,
• recognition and control of turfgrass pests, and
• environmental concerns for ornamental and turf-
  grass pest control.

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ORNAMENTALS

INTRODUCTION
Some plant  damage  is caused by living pests, in-
cluding:
• disease agents,
«* weeds,
• insects and mites, and
• vertebrate animals.

Other causes of plant problems are:
• too little, too much, or imbalanced fertilizer,
• pesticide injury,
• improper planting and pruning,
• root girdling,
• soil conditions  (such as improper drainage, com-
  paction),
• mechanical damage (by  such things as earth-
  moving equipment, mowers, and hand tools),
• pollution  damage, and
• natural aging of plants  (often mistaken for dam-
  age caused by insects and diseases).

You must diagnose  the problem  before using  con-
trol  methods.  Can you find an insect or recognize
the symptoms of a  disease?  Pinpointing causes  of
plant damage  usually requires close observation.

DISEASE  AGENTS
Fungi, bacteria, viruses,  nematodes, mycoplasmas,
and  parasitic  plants cause  diseases of landscape
plants. Most common diseases are caused by fungi.
The  environment  is  of major importance to the
development of disease in woody plants. For ex-
ample:
• A sudden drop in  temperature in the fall or early
  winter increases  the  susceptibility  of plants  to
  cankers caused by fungi.
• Waterlogging of  the soil  contributes to the de-
  velopment of certain root rots.
• Long periods of rain can cause an  increase  of
  such fungal diseases as  scab and leaf spots.

The  more common diseases  of landscape plants are
described below.

Vascular  Wilt
Vascular wilt fungi of shade trees are  of two types:
• those that infect roots (Verticillium wilt), and
• those that infect stems  (Dutch elm disease).
The  organism  that causes Vericillium  wilt is pres-
ent in  the soil. It  spreads upward from the roots
through sapwood and interferes with water move-
ment and other plant functions. Dutch elm disease
is transmitted by elm bark beetles.

In both diseases,  leaf wilting, browning  between
veins, and leaf drop usually begin in one branch
and  progress  through  the tree. Dead and  dying
branches,  sparseness  of  the  crown,  and  reduced
twig growth are common symptoms.  Another is a
discolored  streaking  in  the   wood  of  affected
branches or  in the main trunk.

Leaf  Spots

Fungal leaf  spots  occur on most kinds  of  orna-
mental plants. They usually appear  first on  the
lower leaves. They may begin  as dark brown, pin-
head-sized spots which  sometimes have  a yellow
halo. Spots  may enlarge  to cover an entire  leaf.
Small,  black structures the size of pinheads are in
the center of many leaf spots. As the spots become
more abundant, leaves may yellow, die, and drop.

Leaf spots  are more common in the early spring
and  fall.  Wet  conditions usually are  necessary for
infection. Healthy plants  become infected when the
fungus spores  are:
• splashed onto them from infected leaves on the
  ground,
• blown to them by the wind, or
• carried to them on clothing and tools.

Scab
Apples, crab  apples, and pyracantha are suscep-
tible to the scab fungus.  Symptoms include:
• spots on leaves and fruit, and
• premature defoliation.

Scab first  appears  as  olive-green spots on  the
underside of new leaves. These spots become brown
and  velvety; then leaves  turn  yellow and drop pre-
maturely. Fruit  may become  infected at  any time
with circular,  olive-green spots that  later become
brown  or black. The fungi overwinter in  infected
leaves  and produce spores in the spring.

Powdery  Mildew

Powdery  mildew occurs  on plants both  in  green-
houses and  outdoors.  Common   hosts  are  rose,

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zinnia, crab apple,  euonymus,  and crape myrtle.
Powdery mildew  may produce  a  white powdery
coating  on the leaves,  buds, or stems of highly
susceptible plants. The new growth is stunted  and
curled, and leaves may become  dry and drop. The
flower buds are often deformed and  may fail to
open properly.

Bacterial Fire Blight

Certain  varieties  of  apple,  flowering  crab, pear,
pyracantha, mountain ash, and  quince  are highly
susceptible to  fire blight. Hawthorn,  rose, coton-
easter, spirea,  and  amelanchier are affected  less
seriously.

The signs  of fire blight are:
•  Blossoms and  leaves  suddenly  wilt,  turn  dark
   brown,  shrivel,  and  die,  but  usually  remain
   attached.
•  Secondary infections start in the  small twigs,  pro-
   gress down  the stem,  and  may involve  whole
   branches.
•  Blighted terminals may bend to look  like a shep-
   herd's crook.
•  Dark streaking  of the wood  extends  several
   inches beyond the diseased area.
•  Cankers on  limbs  are  shrunken, and are dark
   brown to purple.  An orange gum or slime often
   oozes from them.

The baceria  overwinter  in cankers on the plant.
They are spread by:
•  wind-blown rain,
•  insects, and
•  pruning tools.

Nematodes

Many nematodes live in the soil and feed on plant
roots. Some kinds cause small knots on roots; others
kill the tips of feeder roots.

The above-ground symptoms of nematode damage
may  include:
•  yellowing of foliage,
•  stunting, and
•  a general decline of the plant.

It  is  difficult  to distinguish  between the symptoms
of nematode  damage and root  rot infection.  You
may  need to have soil and plant samples examined
in a laboratory to confirm a nematode infestation.
Root-knot of boxwood is an example of a nematode
disease of ornamentals.

Disease Control
Types  of chemicals  available  for disease  control
include:
• Protective  chemicals applied  to foliage, flowers,
  and  fruit.  They are subject  to weathering and
  must be reapplied regularly.
• Systemic chemicals.  These can be  applied less
  frequently.
• Soil fumigants. Use of these to  control soil-borne
  fungi,  bacteria, and nematodes is  economically
  feasible in  the production and establishment  of
  high-value  ornamentals.

There are no known  chemicals for control of virus.
With few exceptions, disease-controlling  pesticides
will  not eradicate  disease-producing  agents  after
infection has occurred. Careful  management,  in-
cluding pruning out of dead and dying plant  parts
and  the  removal of  infected leaves,  coupled  with
preventive  use of the  correct fungicides and bac-
tericides, will prevent further spread. In some situa-
tions, routine preventive use of  a pesticide is the
only practical way  to protect  highly susceptible
plants.  Your local  extension agent can help you
identify  your pest problems and  select the correct
pesticide.

WEEDS
Many  kinds  of weeds are pests in landscape plant-
ings.

 Annual Weeds
Annual  weeds are most  troublesome in  intensively
cultivated ornamentals. Common annual  weeds  in
ornamentals  include:
• grasses  (crabgrass, foxtailgrass,   fall  panicum,
   and barnyardgrass)  which germinate  during  the
   spring and summer,
 • annual bluegrass  and annual  bromegrass, which
   germinate during the late summer or fall,
 • annual broadleaf weeds (purslane, pigweed,  and
   lambsquarters) which germinate during the warm
   season and are killed by hard frost, and
 •  those that survive freezing temperatures (horse-
   weed,  common   chickweed,  bittercress,   and
    pepperweed).

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Biennial  and  Perennial  Weeds

Biennial  and  perennial  weeds are  most  trouble-
some in uncultivated ornamentals. They have under-
ground plant parts  that survive from year  to year.
They are spread in  several ways:
•  Many spread easily when  carried in soil, in root
   balls, and on cultivating equipment, as well as by
   seeds.  These  include  Bermuda grass, Johnson
   grass, quackgrass, nutsedge, mugwort, and wild
   garlic.
•  Seeds of perennial weeds  such as  dandelion  and
   goldenrod  are spread  primarily  by  wind  and
   water.
•  Horsetail  rush is spread  by underground plant
   parts and by spores.

Weed  Control

Consider both the weeds and the ornamental plants
when choosing control methods. You can  use  cul-
tural methods,  mechanical  methods, herbicides, or
combinations  of  the  three.  Many  weeds  are re-
sistant to some cultural or chemical controls. No
herbicide  is safe for all ornamental plants. Newly
planted ornamentals usually  are more easily injured
by herbicides  than  established plantings. The label
will tell  you  how  to  use a  herbicide safely  and
effectively.

Herbicides kill  weeds throueh  the  leaves  or the
roots  or both. Selective herbicides kill some plants
without killing others. Nonselective  herbicides kill
most plants in the area of application.

The main types of herbicides used in  or  around
ornamentals are:
•  preemergence herbicides,
•  postemergence herbicides, and
•  soil  fumigants and sterilants.

Persistence varies with  the herbicide and the dos-
age. Persistent herbicides may leave residues that
may injure a sensitive crop planted later. Repeated
applications of persistent herbicides also can injure
ornamental  plants  under certain soil and  climatic
conditions. Granular formulations are  an  efficient
way to apply preemergence  herbicides. Postemer-
gence  herbicides usually are less  persistent  than
preemergence herbicides. They  usually  must  be
applied as a directed spray.

Soil fumigants  are nonselective  and  cannot  be
used in the root zones of desirable plants. Use fumi-
gants before planting. The label will specify waiting
periods between treatment and planting.

Soil  sterilants will  control  most  weeds  for long
periods  of  time.  In humid regions, however,  no
material is  completely effective for more  than one
season. Soil sterilants are  nonselective. They can
damage nearby trees, shrubs, and turfgrass through
root uptake or movement of the chemical by wind
or water.

INSECTS AND  MITES
Ornamenal   plants  are  damaged  by  many   kinds
of insects and mites.  Some suck sap  from plants,
others  chew  on or  tunnel  in plant parts or cause
damage in  other  ways.

Some plants are  very  susceptible  to  insects and
mites and  require  intensive pest  control.  Other
plants are rarely attacked by insects or mites. Pest
insect  infestations  vary from  year  to year,  and
control is not always needed.

There  are  several kinds of insects and mites that
you should recognize.  They can be  grouped accord-
ing to  the  part of the plant they feed on and  the
kind of injury they cause.

Insects and Mites  that Damage  Leaves,
Buds, Fruits,  and Flowers

CATERPILLARS are the larvae  of butterflies or
moths. Caterpillars  chew plant parts and may com-
pletely defoliate a plant. Some form webs or tents
on the branches. A  few bore into the plant and feed
inside. Some have more than one generation per year.
BEETLES are hardshelled insects. Many have spots,
stripes,  or  other  markings. Both adults and larvae
may damage plant parts by boring into or chewing
thsm. Some beetles  are active only at night.
LEAFMINERS are the  larvae of small flies,  wasps,
moths, or beetles. They feed inside  the leaf. Damage
appears as  brown or discolored blotches or winding
trails on the leaf.  There  may be more than one gen-
eration per year.
APHIDS are small,  soft-bodied insects that suck sap
through tiny needle-like hiouthparts. There may be
several generations  in a  single season.  They may be
green,  red, or black. They feed on  stems, terminals,
or undersides of leaves.

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Foliage  often curls or is otherwise distorted. Some
aphids  transmit  plant  disease.  Aphids  produce
honeydew,  a sweet liquid  which  collects  on the
foliage. A black sooty mold may grow on the honey-
dew.  Sooty  mold is controlled by  controlling the
aphids.
MITES  are closely related to insects. They are hard
to  see  without  magnification.  Eggs, young,  and
adults all may be present on an infested plant at the
same  time.  Some form webs on the lower leaf sur-
face.  Mites damage leaves  by sucking  sap.  The
foliage becomes stippled and may turn off-green, yel-
low, or  orange. Mites may produce several  genera-
tions  in a single season.
LACEBUGS are  small,  broad,  flat insects  with
clear, lace-like wings. Eggs, young, and  adults all
may be  on a plant at the same time. Both adults and
young suck  sap and cause off-colored speckles, yel-
lowing,  and leaf drop. Many small, black, varnish-
like spots of excrement on the undersides of leaves
are evidence of lacebug infestation.

Insect Pests  of Trunks, Stems, or
Branches
SCALE  INSECTS  AND  MEALYBUGS  may kill
large  branches or whole plants. Some attack leaves
and buds.  Both insects secrete a protective waxy
substance which covers them.

Mealybugs  move on the plants as both young and
adults. Newly hatched scale insects (crawlers) move
around  on the plant. Mature scale insects, however,
are securely fastened to the plant surface. They may
be circular,  oval,  or pear-shaped.  Large numbers
may form crusts on the plant. They lay eggs under-
neath the protective covering.
BORERS are larvae of some moths  and beetles.
They do the most damage in the tissue just under the
bark. Plants in poor health are more susceptible to
attack by borers. One to  several  years may be re-
quired to complete a life cycle.

 Insect Pests  of Roots

GRUBS are the larvae  of hardshelled  beetles  or
weevils. They usually are white with brown  heads.
Some have legs; others are legless.  Grubs eat plant
 roots and may weaken or kill a plant.
 ROOT BORERS are the larvae of moths or beetles.
 They are shaped like grubs or caterpillars. They are
usually a whitish color. Root borers damage plants
by eating or hollowing out plant roots and crowns.
ROOT-FEEDING  APHIDS weaken the  root  sys-
tems of plants. They damage roots by sucking  sap,
which may cause galls to form. Root aphids look
like foliar-feeding aphids. Some are serious pests of
foliage as well as roots.
GALLS are swellings of plant parts. Many kinds of
insects and mites cause  galls and live inside them.
Galls  are unsightly but usually are not harmful to
the health of  a plant.

Insect  and Mite  Control
To control insects and  mites,  direct  the  pesticide
at the stage of the insect or mite that is causing the
damage. In some situations, preventive use of insec-
ticides may be necessary to protect plants from in-
festations. Your  decision to use a preventive insec-
ticide should  be  based on a previous history of in-
festation in your area. Your  local extension  agent
can help to identify your pest problems and select
the correct pesticide.

VERTEBRATE  PESTS
Vertebrate animals  may  damage  ornamentals in
several ways. Some (such as mice and moles) feed
on roots and crowns. Others (including mice, rabbits,
deer,  and woodpeckers) feed on stems, trunks, twigs,
or foliage.

Barriers, trapping, repellents, and pesticides all help
control vertebrate  pests. Control of the  insects on
which vertebrate pests feed is  essential.

TURFGRASS

INTRODUCTION

Pest control  in turfgrass includes:
• good cultural  practices, and
• chemical pest control.

Turfgrass  problems  often result  from causes  other
than  pests. These other causes include:
 • improper watering,
 • improper fertilization practices,
 • injury from pesticides,
 • accumulation of excessive thatch,
 • improper  selection of turfgrass species,
 • improper  mowing height,
 • poor root systems,

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•  soil that is either too acid or too alkaline, or
•  an accumulation of soluble salts in the soil.
are most severe on grass grown under high nitrogen
fertilization.
Be  sure  to consider these factors when diagnosing
and treating turfgrass problems.

DISEASE AGENTS
The major diseases of turfgrass are caused bj:
• fungi,  which can cause root rots  and foliar dis-
  eases,  and
• nematodes, which feed on the roots.

Stands of  diseased grass may look  thin  and un-
thrifty or contain streaks or circular patches of dead
grass.  Some of the more  common diseases of turf-
grasses are:

Helminthosporium
Helminthosporium causes leaf spots and  root rots.
Spots on the leaves usually begin as small  purplish,
reddish-brown areas  about  the  size of a  pinhead.
These enlarge to form tan to light-brown spots with
reddish-brown margins. When the disease is severe,
the spots girdle the leaves at the base and cause them
to yellow.  A severe infection may cause  a general
fading out of turfgrass. Helminthosporium diseases
are more severe  during long periods of wet weather.
They  develop best under  high nitrogen  fertilization.

Rusts
Symptoms  are  light-yellow  flecks on  the leaves.
As  these spots  enlarge,  the  surfaces of the leaves
rupture.  Dry, reddish-brown  pustules  develop.  At
this stage, the spores  readily  rub  off. The  grass first
becomes  light yellow and then rapidly turns tan or
light brown as the grass  leaves  die. Rusts  develop
best in moderate air temperatures.  The disease  is
less severe on rye grasses grown under high nitro-
gen fertilization.

Pythium  Blights
Pythium  blights  are  among the  most  destructive
turfgrass diseases. Grasses most  commonly affected
are bentgrasses,  Bermuda grasses, fescues, and rye
grasses. The disease is first seen as small, irregularly-
shaped, watersoaked, greasy  patches V2 to 4 inches
in diameter. A cottony growth may be present early
in   the morning.  Diseased  areas  may eventually
range  from  1  to  10 feet  in  diameter.  Pythium
blights develop best in warm, humid weather. They
Rhizoctonia  Brown  Patch
Under  conditions  of close mowing,  Rhizoctonia
brown  patch  appears as irregularly  shaped patches
of blighted turfgrass that range in size from a few
inches  to 2 feet or larger. At first, the patches are
purple-green  in color.  They  then fade to a light
brown. When the grass is wet, the diseased patches
frequently  have  dark,  purplish  margins  (smoke
rings).

When  high mowing is  practiced,  the leaves  wither
and rapidly fade to a light brown. The patches may
be irregular and range up  to 50  feet in diameter.
Rhizoctonia brown patch develops best during long
periods of humid  weather.  The disease usually
occurs during  hot weather  (80-90 degrees F).
Grass  grown under high nitrogen fertilization  is
more susceptible to the disease.

Snow Mold
Pink and  gray  snow  molds are  turfgrass diseases
that occur in  cold weather. A snow cover creates an
ideal situation for the diseases to  develop, but they
often occur in the absence  of snow.

Snow molds  are  seen  as small patches  of  tan  to
light-brown grass, 2 to 4 inches or larger. Pink snow
mold spots usually are smaller than gray snow mold
spots. With gray snow molds, hard,  dark-red bodies
are embedded in the leaves.

Slime Molds
Slime molds appear as dull-gray to light-blue  masses
of powdery growth on the surfaces of the  leaves.
They are most common during long periods of light
rainfall. Although  they  are  unsightly,  they  do  not
damage the grass. Controls are not necessary.

Fusarium  Blight
Fusarium  blight  causes brown patches 1  to 3 feet
in diameter. The patches are similar to those caused
by other  turfgrass  diseases,  but  they have green
tufts (frog eyes)  in the center. Fusarium blight is
most severe during periods of high day and night
temperatures. Lush grass with an accumulation of
1 inch or more  of thatch  is highly susceptible to
severe  outbreaks.

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Fairy Rings
Fairy rings are seen as circles of darker green, faster-
growing turfgrass ranging from 2 to several hundred
feel  in diameter. They are  often  surrounded  by
mushrooms,  toadstools,  or  puffballs.  These  fungi
may prevent water from  penetrating the soil.

Nematodes
Many  kinds  of nematodes  feed  on the  roots of
turfgrasses and reduce  their vigor. Nematode  in-
jury may be  confused  with  nutritional problems,
insufficient water, compact soil, or any other factor
which  restricts root development.

Symptoms of nematode injury include:
• thinning or completely killed areas,
• pale green to yellow  color,
• excessive wilting, and
• poor response to  fertilization.
The best way to identify nematode problems  is
with a laboratory examination of  soil or plants.

Disease Controls
Disease-producing  agents   in  turfgrasses  can  be
minimized and in  some cases controlled th-ough the
use  of  good  management  practices.  Turfgrass
fungicides are available for use as  preventive sprays
or granules. When an outbreak of a disease  agent
occurs, apply  preventive  fungicides  immediately.
After  infection has  occurred,  use a  preventive
fungicide to protect against future infection. Timing
of protective fungicide applications should be  based
on  a knowledge of:
• the life cycle of the fungus, and
• weather conditions that are best for its parasitic
  activities.

Preventive use of a fungicide  is  sometimes war-
ranted when the location has a history of turfgrass
disease. The  routine use of fungicides can prevent
disease outbreaks in turfgrass, but  is an expensive
and potentially harmful practice. Your local exten-
sion agent can help you identify pest problems and
select  the correct pesticide.

WEEDS
Any plant can be considered a weed if it is  grow-
ing where it is not wanted. Bentgrass, for example,
would be a weed in a  bluegrass lawn. To plan  a
good weed control program, you  must:
• identify the desirable turfgrass,
• identify the existing weeds, and
• know what other weeds are  likely  to become a
  problem.

Annual  Weeds
Annual  weeds  complete  their  life  cycle  in less
than one year. Because climatic conditions influence
the  timing  of the  life cycle, the correct time  for
control varies from place to place, year to year, and
from one species to another. It is often desirable to
establish turfgrass in the fall so the freezing weather
will  control summer  annual weeds. In  established
turfgrass, the chemical control  of summer annual
weeds after midsummer may not be  necessary  or
desirable.
SUMMER  ANNUAL WEEDS common to turfgrass
are:
  Broadleaf Weeds       Grass Weeds
  henbit
  knotweed
  spurge
crabgrass
goosegrass
barnyardgrass
foxtailgrass
stinkgrass
WINTER ANNUALS are common in new turfgrass.
After  the first year, good management  and dense
turfgrass  usually provide satisfactory control.  Ex-
amples are:
   Broadleaf                 Grass Weeds
   common chickweed        cheat
   shepherdspurse

 Biennial  Weeds
Biennial weeds normally occur  at  the  same  time
 as perennial broadleaf weeds. Controls are  similar.
 Examples are: roundleaf mallow and wild carrot.

 Perennial Weeds
Perennials, both broadleaf and grasses, occur widely
 as turfgrass weeds. Examples are:
   Broadleaf Weeds          Grass Weeds
   dandelion
   wild garlic
   dichondra
   plantain
   mouse-ear chickweed
   red sorrel
   Bermuda grass
   bentgrass
   tall fescue
   quackgrass
   nimblewill
   torpedograss
   nutsedge

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 Weed Control

 The presence of weeds in turfgrass does not always
 require the  use of  herbicides.  In  areas  that con-
 tain sensitive plants, it may  be better to avoid  the
 use of herbicides than to risk injury.  In some loca-
 tions,  any  kind of plant cover may be better than
 dead plants or bare ground.

 Granular  formulations  are  effective  for  pre-
 emergence herbicides.  Sprays  are  better for  post-
 emergence control where foliar coverage is needed.

 BROADLEAF  WEEDS—Several  postemergence
 herbicides  are used to selectively  control annual,
 biennial, and  perennial broadleaf weeds in  turf-
 grasses. They can  be used alone or as combinations
 of more than one active ingredient. Spring and fall
 applications  of postemergence herbicides normally
 give satisfactory control and reduce the possibility
 of damage to  nontarget plants.  Young weeds are
 usually more susceptible  to herbicides. Spot treat-
 ments are  best  for  scattered weed   populations.
 Weather conditions affect control results.

 GRASS WEEDS—Control of annual grasses is best
 achieved with:
 • preemergence herbicides for general  infestations,
 • spot treatment with postemergence  herbicides for
   localized infestations.

 Few herbicides  are  safe for use on  newly seeded
 turfgrass. Some preemergence herbicides applied in
 the  spring adversely  affect  germination of  turf-
 grasses seeded  in the fall. Certain varieties of turf-
 grasses  are more  prone to  injury  by some herbi-
 cides. Check  labels for precautions.

 Perennial grass weeds are  the most  difficult  to
 control. No herbicides are available which will con-
 trol these  weeds  without damaging  cool  season
 turfgrass. Some will  selectively control them  in
 warm season  turfgrass. Soil fumigants and nonselec-
 tive herbicides  are  sometimes used.

 INSECTS
When examining turfgrass for insects, look for:
•  thinned grass stands,
•  dying or dead patches,
•  discolored or withered blades,
•  chewed or frayed blades,
•  frass or webbing,
•  small holes, mounds, or burrows, or
•  presence of large numbers of bird  and animal
   droppings.

Some  of  the more  troublesome  turfgrass insect
pests are:

Grubs
Grubs  are  the larvae of hardshelled beetles.  They
are white to  off-white with  a brown head  and six
legs.  Grubs  damage grass  by  eating  the roots.
Seriously damaged turfgrass  can  be rolled back like
a carpet. When the grass is rolled back, grubs may
be found lying in a C-shaped position in  the  soil.
Grubs  are  most easily controlled during the time
they are actively feeding.

Billbugs
Billbugs are small, dark-colored beetles with snouts.
Adults lay eggs in turfgrass items  in  late spring.
The  eggs hatch into legless  larvae.  The larvae eat
their way  down  the  stems  and into  the  crowns.
Adults feed on  leaves  and  stems,  but cause less
damage than  the  larvae.  Damage  shows  up  in
late  summer  as small dead  patches of turfgrass.
Damaged plants break off at  the crown if pulled on.

Sod Webworms
Sod  webworm  caterpillars  are  1 inch  or  less  in
length. They are  off-white  with parallel  rows  of
small dark  spots. The adults  are  cigar-shaped, buff-
colored moths.  The  caterpillars chew off  grass
stems and leaves above the soil line. Damage shows
up as small dead spots. When many sod webworms
are present, the spots join  to form large, irregu-
larly shaped brown patches.  Adult  sod webworms
do not damage turfgrasses.

Chinch  Bugs
Full-grown chinch  bugs  are about V*  inch  long.
They are rectangular  black bugs with a white area
on their back. Turfgrass infested with chinch bugs
is  a  sickly off-color at first,  with brown and green
blades  intermixed.  Later,  large  irregular  dead
patches show  up.  Young and adult  chinch bugs
suck sap from turfgrass blades.  The bugs may  be
found deep in the thatch at the  outer  edge of  the
brown  patches.

Insect  Control
Insects that attack turfgrass  at  or  below the  soil
surface  can be  controlled  only by directing  the

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pesticide at the soil surface  and watering it in to
contact the pests.  Foliage-feeding insects can  be
controlled  by  directing the insecticide at the turf-
grass foliage.

Watering  in  an  application  directed  at  foliage
feeders will move  the  insecticide below the area
where the  insect  pest  is feeding and the desired
control will be lost. In some areas, preventive appli-
cations of  insecticides will minimize damage from
soil insect pests. More than one pest may  be causing
damage at  the same time. Each may require differ-
ent timing  and placement of insecticide for control.
Be sure to consider this when you develop a treat-
ment  schedule. Your  local  extension  agent  can
help you identify pest problems and select the cor-
rect pesticide.

VERTEBRATE PESTS
Vertebrate   animals may damage  large areas  of
turfgrass while  they are searching for grubs  or
other soil-infesting insects. They include:
•  mice,
•  voles,
•  skunks,
•  moles,
•  raccoons,
•  foxes,
•  squirrels, and
•  birds.

Control of turfgrass-damaging  insects  also helps
control damage by  vertebrate  animals,  because it
reduces their  food  supply.

PHYTOTOXICITY

Phytotoxicity is  undesirable injury to plants. Symp-
toms  of phytotoxicity include:
•  leaf drop,
•  stunting,
•  overgrowth,
•  discolored foliage,
•  leaf curl, and
•  stem distortion.

The cause  of  phytotoxicity  may be easy to deter-
mine or it may be subtle and hidden. Pesticides can
cause phytotoxicity. Other causes that create similar
symptoms are:
•  insects and disease agents,
•  insufficient moisture,
•  improper fertilization, and
•  other adverse growing conditions.
Factors that may  contribute to pesticide phytotoxic-
ity include:
•  high  air  temperature  during and  immediately
  after pesticide application,
•  excessive rates  of pesticide application,
•  too little water,
•  uneven distribution of pesticide,
•  mixing liquids  or emulsifiable concentrates with
  wettable powders,
•  mixing fertilizers with pesticides,
•  variety and species differences.
Take special care  to avoid injury to landscape plants
and  turfgrass when  using  herbicides.  Some  herbi-
cides leave residues in spray tanks  that  will injure
desirable plants. Use separate sprayers for herbicides.

ENVIRONMENTAL

CONCERNS

To control drift and vaporization:
•  Apply pesticides when wind speeds are low.
•  Use  lowest  practical  operating pressure  and
  largest practical nozzle  opening.
•  Keep nozzle  as close to target as  possible.
•  Avoid using airblast  sprayers and dusters  when
  working near sensitive plants and areas inhabited
  by animals.
•  Do not apply herbicides with  airblast sprayers.
•  When possible, select products with low volatility.
To control the adverse effects of pesticide movement:
•  Use special precautions when using pesticides on
  slopes.
•  Select the least hazardous pesticide that will do
   the job.
•  Use the lowest effective rate  of  application.
•  If possible, maintain a buffer zone between the
   area to be treated and  sensitive areas.
•  Use mulches.
•  Consider the chances of heavy rainfall.
•  Regulate  the amount and duration of irrigation.
•  Be aware of the potential for ground water con-
   tamination.
•  Avoid  carrying treated material  or the pesticide
   residue from the target area  to other areas.
You must know  the persistence of pesticides  you
apply  to  ornamentals and  turfgrass,  especially
where:
•  adjacent areas may be affected,
•  treated soil is used to grow other plants, or
•  humans, pets,  or other animals are present.

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Repeated applications of some pesticides to the same
area may cause harmful residues.


PROTECTING  ANIMALS
AND  PEOPLE

Keep  animals and people away during application
and until spray has dried or dust has settled. Keep
them away from areas of potential drift and runoff.
Remove  toys,  pet food dishes, birdfeeders,  and
other articles from the site before applying a pesti-
cide. Do not use pesticides when people or pets can-
not be excluded during the reentry period specified
on the label.


APPLICATION

Methods of application vary with:
• the kind of pesticide,
• the host, and
• the target pest.

Application equipment must be able  to  deliver  a
thorough coverage of the correct amount of pesti-
cide to the plant parts which need protection.

Low-pressure, low-volume sprayers or granular ap-
plicators can be used for control of:
• soil or foliage pests of ornamentals,
• diseases or insects on turfgrass, or
• weeds.

High-pressure  hydraulic  or  airblast  sprayers  are
not often  used  on ornamentals or  turfgrass.  You
can use them  for spraying large trees.


AREA  MEASUREMENTS

To  determine  how much pesticide  you will  need
to do  a  job, you must  measure the  area to be
treated. If the area is a rectangle, circle, or triangle,
simple formulas may be used.

Rectangles: The area of a rectangle  is found by
multiplying the  length by the width.
Area = Length x Width.
                                 W
Circles:  The area of a circle is the radius  (one-
half the diameter) squared and then multiplied by
3.14.
Area = 3.14 X the radius squared.
Triangles: The area of a triangle is one-half the base
multiplied  by the  height.

        bxh
Area =	
                    B
Irregularly  shaped  tuifgrass  areas  often  can  be
reduced to  one or more  of these  common shapes.
Calculate tr: area of each and add them together
to obtain the total area.
Example:
                     Area A-f B+C = Total Area

Another way is to establish a line down the middle of
the property for the length, and then measure from
side to side at several  points along this line. Areas
with very irregular shape require more side to side
measurements. The average of the side measurements
can be used as the width. The area is then calculated
as a rectangle.
Area = Length X Width. Example:
                                               10

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                                                 WEIGHTS  AND  MEASURES
                  Length = line AB
                  U/M,U    line
                  Width =
A third method is to convert the area into a circle.
From a center point measure distance to the edge of
the area  in  10 to 20  increments.  Average these
measurements to find  the average radius. Then  cal-
culate  the area, using  the formula for a  circle.
Area = 3.14 X the radius  squared.
Example:
                                                  Weights
                                                  1 ounce
                                                  16 ounces
                                                  1 gallon water
                 =  28.35 grams
                 =  1 pound = 453.59 grams
                 =  8.34 pounds = 3.785 liters =
                     3.78 kilograms
Liquid Measures
1 fluid ounce     =

16 fluid ounces    =
2 pints           =
8 pints = 4  quarts =
Length

l foot
3 feet
16'/2 feet
5,280 feet
                                                  Area
                                                  1 square foot     =
                                                  9 square feet     =

                                                  43,560 square feet =
                                                  Speed

                                                  1.466 feet per
                                                    second
   2 tablespoons =
   29.573 milliliters
   1 pint =0.473 liter
   1 quart = 0.946 liter
   1 gallon = 3.785 liters
=  30.48 centimeters
=  1 yard = 0.9144 meter
=  1 rod = 5.029 meters
=  320 rods =1 mile =
   1.6 kilometers
                     929.03 cm2
                     1 square yard =
                     0.836 square meter
                     160 square rods= 1 acre =
                     0.405 hectare
                      88 feet per minute =
                      1 mph = 1.6 kilometers per
                      hour (kph)
                 (line A+B+C+D+E+F+ \2
                    G+H+I+J+K+L

                            12
 Volume
 27 cubic feet

 1 cubic foot
    1 cubic yard =
    0.765 cubic meter
    7.5 gallons =
    28.317 cubic decimeters
       * u.s. GovBmmTnuimmi OFFICE^ 1978—720-335/6150
                                                11

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