The war against sudden oak death in southwest Oregon forests wages on, but nursery diligence still makes a difference.
Read the article by Ebba Peterson in the March Digger Magazine:
http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.oan.org/resource/resmgr/files/Digger201403OSU.pdf
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Friday, April 4, 2014
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
May 1 Sales Closing Date Near for Nursery Crop Insurance Coverage
Spokane, Wash., April 1, 2014 – The
USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA) reminds Pacific Northwest nursery growers
of the May 1, 2014, sales closing date for 2015 Nursery Multi-Peril Crop
Insurance (MPCI) coverage.
MPCI Nursery insurance provides
protection for wholesale nurseries producing and marketing nursery plants grown
in standard nursery containers or in the field. Coverage is based on a
plant inventory value report (PIVR) that declares a value of insurable plants
(the lower of a nursery grower’s own prices or prices contained in a Plant
Price Schedule maintained by USDA).
New policy applications may be filed at
any time, however, all applications, including those for new or amended
coverage, are subject to a 30-day waiting period before coverage begins.
Current nursery policyholders may request changes in coverage and/or obtain the
Pilot Nursery Grower’s Price Endorsement (NGPE) in Oregon and Washington before
the May 1 sales closing deadline.
Local crop insurance agents are
available to provide program details that reflect the grower’s nursery
inventory. A list of crop insurance agents is available at all USDA
Service Centers throughout the U.S. or at: http://www3.rma.usda.gov/tools/agents/ .
Webinar - Alternative disinfectant water treatments for nurseries
Title: Alternative disinfectant water treatments
Date: Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Time: Noon to 1:00 pm (Eastern)
Presenter: Dr. Warren Copes, USDA-ARS Southern Horticultural Lab in Poplarville, MS
To participate in this webinar, please go to https://connect.extension.iastate.edu/irrigation-water/
and dial 1-888-619-1583 then enter pass code: 491981
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Stream monitoring for P. ramorum in WA, 2013 results
Washington Department of Natural Resources Phytophthora ramorum update – Phytophthora ramorum waterway monitoring as well as forest and nursery perimeter surveys have been conducted in Washington since 2003, with efforts since 2006 focusing on aquatic areas near previously positive nurseries. In 2013, 11 P. ramorum stream baiting sites were established in western Washington waterways, of which two were identified as positive – one in Clallam County and one in Thurston County. Eleven additional sites were repeatedly sampled in Clallam County as the source of the inoculum there is unknown; however, results to date have been negative or inconclusive.
In 2013, the water monitoring sampling methodology was changed from stream baiting with mesh bags to the Bottle-of-Bait method in the interest of increasing efficiency. Since waterway sampling began in 2005, P. ramorum has been detected in seven waterways in western Washington: two in King County and one each in Clallam, Clark, Lewis, Pierce, and Thurston Counties. Diseased plants were found associated with one of the waterways in 2010 (Pierce County) and were destroyed.
Monday, January 27, 2014
Citizen science charts horse chestnut tree pest spread
A citizen science study,
involving more than 3,500 people, has revealed the spread and
establishment of the horse chestnut leaf-miner in the UK.
It also suggests that a native species of wasp that preys on the tiny insect will not be able to curb its impact.Read the article on BBC: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25878202
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
USDA revises sudden oak death regulations
The USDA is revising its sudden oak death quarantine regulations for shipment of nursery stock in a way that reduces the burden on nurseries that pose a minimal risk and focuses resources on high-risk nurseries.
- See more at: http://www.capitalpress.com/article/20140114/ARTICLE/140119922/1318#sthash.MHu4tiZ2.dpuf
Read the text of the regulation here:
The USDA has revised its rules on sudden oak death to level the playing field for the nursery industry.
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