Organic orchard floor management in peach: effects on arthropods and associated fruit injury in the Intermountain West

Author:

Freundlich Grace E12ORCID,Schaeffer Robert N1ORCID,Tebeau Andrew S1,Black Brent L3ORCID,Ransom Corey V3,Reeve Jennifer R3ORCID,Alston Diane G1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Utah State University , Logan, UT 84322 , USA

2. Biology Department, Furman University , Greenville, SC 29617 , USA

3. Department of Plants, Soils, and Climate, Utah State University , Logan, UT 84322 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Understanding orchard floor management is critical to organic tree-fruit production systems given its impact on weeds, soil fertility, tree health, and crop yield. Several viable options are available to producers for weed management and promotion of organic fertility, including use of turf and broadleaf alleyway covers and living and nonliving tree-row mulches. While these measures can be effective, little is known about how these strategies influence arthropod pests, which cause fruit injury. Here, we assessed 6 organic orchard floor management strategies for their impact on arthropod abundance and diversity in an organic peach production system in northern Utah from 2010 to 2014, using sweep netting and pitfall collections along with observed peach fruit damage. Generally, we found that alleyway and tree-row treatments had no impact on total arthropod diversity, species richness, or community diversity. However, earwig (Forficula auricularia) abundance was significantly impacted by alleyway and tree-row treatments that resulted in increased fruit injury. Trefoil alleyway treatments consistently increased earwig abundance across life-history stages, while mulch or Alyssum (straw) tree-row treatments harbored more earwigs and, as a result, increased earwig fruit injury. Since earwigs are especially prone to damaging young, developing fruits, it is imperative that more work is done to assess earwig abundances and life-history traits. Our results demonstrate that detrimental arthropods are sensitive to orchard floor management and can further inform integrated pest management approaches that complement sustainability goals.

Funder

USDA NIFA Organic Research and Education Initiative

Utah Agricultural Experiment Station

Utah State Cooperative Extension Service

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology,General Medicine

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