Jerry Brust, IPM Vegetable Specialist, University of Maryland; jbrust@umd.edu
This has been a long cold winter that hopefully will come to an end soon. Growers who have high tunnels (HTs) already have some of them in operation or are about to get them started for the upcoming season. There are many things that need to be done to get a HT into shape, but I want to talk about a few potential problems I have seen while visiting grower operations this fall and winter. The first are the HTs that were not cleaned up after the previous year’s crop was done. Many of these are old tomato plantings, most of which have had their plastic, stakes and drip-tape removed, although some not (Fig. 1) and the plants were left to rot in the HT. With as cold a winter as we have had this does not seem like too bad of an idea, but these plants more often than not harbor problems that will manifest themselves in May or June if not earlier. In about 35% of the HTs that had left the crop to rot I could find, usually at low levels, overwintering female two spotted spider mites on some of the plant material that remained green. These overwintering female mites (always female) are orange-red in color (Fig. 2). As soon as the HT has fresh plants in it these mites will move over to these plants and begin to feed and reproduce. These mite populations slowly build and spread throughout the HT during the season and when it gets very warm outside they can explode in numbers. Normally growers do not check their small plants for mites in March or April because it is so rare that spider mites are present, but I have seen an increasing number of HTs with two spotted spider mite problems early in the year when there should be none. These mites are either the overwintering kind or they have been brought in on the transplants; whichever is the case, small tomato plants need to be inspected for mites early in the season.
Figure 1. Plant debris (tomatoes) left in a high tunnel in early January can harbor insect problems for next season
The other problem I have seen in HTs is that growers sometimes do a good job of cleaning up their crop debris, but they allow winter weeds such as henbit, wild mustards and chickweed to grow either inside the HT or just outside of its edge (Fig. 3). My work over the years has shown that several thrips species, and to lesser extent spider mites, can overwinter on these weeds. Chickweed was the most preferred host by thrips, followed by henbit and the mustards. The thrips will feed on the succulent leaves of chickweed, which can maintain them throughout the winter in semi-protected areas (Fig. 4). Several different thrips species have been found on these weeds including western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis). As with the plant debris from last year these winter annual weeds need to be cleaned up weeks before you plant anything into the HT. And as with mites, small plants need to be inspected for thrips.
Figure 2. Overwintering form of the two spotted spider mite
Figure 3. Chickweed growing inside and outside the edge of a high tunnel in February
Figure 4. Close-up of chickweed leaves with thrips feeding (leaf stippling)