Napa Valley Register :: American Canyon Eagle :: St. Helena Star :: Weekly Calistogan :: Real Estate :: Classifieds
 QUICK LINKS
 MARKETPLACE
  Jobs
  Autos
 SERVICES

News > Local

European grapevine moth spotted in St. Helena
No pest spotting yet in Calistoga, but Napa Valley’s newest grapevine pest is on the march
Thursday, November 12, 2009

The number of adult European grapevine moths found in Napa County has risen to eight since they were first spotted last month. Agricultural officials have found 29 larval specimens as well.

The moth has been trapped on Third Avenue, east of Napa and on Zinfandel Lane south of St. Helena, but primarily the pest has been trapped in the Oakville-Rutherford area. It is estimated the pest is confined to about a 200-acre area.

Greg Clark, Napa County’s assistant agricultural commissioner, offered an update on the moth before about 75 grapegrowers and vineyard managers at a meeting last Tuesday.

“We see this as an ongoing pest issue,” Clark said.

A previously unidentified moth found in 2008 has recently been confirmed as being a European grapevine moth. It was trapped on Money Road near Oakville, Clark said.

The European moth bores into the grape berry, causing botrytis — a fungus that can ruin grape berries. It is a different pest from the Australian light brown apple moth detected in Napa and elsewhere around the state in recent years.

The first European grapevine moth was detected on Sept. 29 in the Oakville area. Since then, 248 traps have been set out, or about five traps per square mile.

Those traps were pulled in late October, because the pest is going into its dormant stage for the winter. New traps will be set out in the spring.

The lifecycle of the moth starts in May with the first generation, followed by a second in mid July and August and the third generation is in September.

“There is no regulatory program in place for dealing with this pest, since it has previously never been found in the United States. We are working with the United States Department of Agriculture to determine where exactly this pest is. We will be ready for it in the spring,” Clark said.

County agricultural officials and the U.S. Department of Agriculture are also working to try and figure out how the European grapevine moth landed here.

Clark added that a technical working group is being formed that will include experts from around the world. He encouraged growers to get unwanted fruit off the vines so the moth can’t take advantage of the decaying fruit clusters. The unwanted clusters should then be incorporated into the soil, he said.

To help growers identify the moth, Lucia Varela, with University of California Cooperative Extension in Sonoma County, said the moth is about a quarter-inch long and the female is always slightly larger than the male. Varela described its markings as brown, tannish and black.

She said the moth prefers temperatures in the mid-80s and nighttime temperatures in the low 50s.

The European grapevine moth has been found in Chile, Italy, Germany, France, Spain, northern Africa, Israel and southern Russia, according to Varela.

Print this story   |   Email this story | Browse today's articles in this category: Previous | Next

No comments posted.


Log in to join the conversation
*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 
Comment guidelines

All comments will be screened and may take several hours to be posted.
• Keep comments clear, concise and focused on the topic in the story.
• Comments exceeding 300 words will not be posted.
• Refrain from personal attacks, degrading comments or remarks that do not add to a constructive dialogue.
• Comments implying suspects in crime-related stories are guilty before they have been proven so in a court of law will be deleted.
• Do not post e-mail addresses or links except for pages on WeeklyCalistogan.com or government Web sites.
• Comments will not be edited - they will be approved or declined.
• Comments may be used in the print edition of the newspaper.
• If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact dross@napanews.com or bkennedy@napanews.com
For further information on the comment guidelines, click here.
Copyright © 2010 Lee Enterprises