Revised
Raspberries and blackberries
Raspberries and blackberries
Delayed dormant sprays
Apply when tips of buds show green.
Red-necked cane borers
A key pest
or pest complex
- Comments
Characteristic injury is a swelling of the cane, about 3 inches long, with a splitting of the bark. Infested canes are weakened and often die. Remove and burn infested canes in early spring.
Anthracnose
A key pest
or pest complex
- Material
liquid lime sulfur - Comments
Apply to canes when leaves are emerging from buds and before the blossoms open. This spray may damage the new leaves if they are longer than 0.75-inch long.
Raspberries and blackberries
Prebloom sprays
Apply when blossom buds first appear through when flowers show white.
Red-necked cane borer
A key pest
or pest complex
- Material
pyrethrins and rotenone - Comments
See comments in "delayed dormant" section. Adult beetles typically appear when flowers show white. Newly formed swellings can be seen in July and August.
Apply insecticide when bloom begins and again 7 to 14 days later. Direct spray to lower part of the primocane and avoid spraying the blossoms.
Raspberry crown borer
- Material
pyrethrins and rotenone - Comments
Infested canes become spindly, lack vigor and often break off at ground level. Remove and destroy weakened or infested canes. Drench crown and lower 2 feet of cane with insecticide.
Raspberry fruitworm
- Material
carbaryl
or esfenvalerate
or neem
or pyrethrins and rotenone
or spinosad - Comments
Grubs tunnel into the center of the fruit to feed, may cause premature fruit drop. Adult beetles feed on foliage resulting in the leaves being skeletonized. Early developing fruit is more at risk than later developing varieties. Apply insecticide when blossom buds first appear and then again before the blossoms open.
Neem (azadirachtin) is a botanical insecticide.
Blackberry psylla
- Material
esfenvalerate - Comments
Feeding damage causes tightly curled leaf clusters. Such leaf clusters should be removed and destroyed immediately. Apply insecticide when this damage first appears (or first notice of adults).
Tarnished plant bug
- Material
malathion
or esfenvalerate
or permethrin
or insecticidal soap - Comments
Damaged berries are malformed, and the whitening of a damaged druplet occurs when mature fruit are attacked. If needed, apply sprays just before the blossoms open and then again when the fruit start to color.
Controlling weeds in and around the planting helps to reduce tarnished plant bug populations.
Raspberries and blackberries
Postbloom through harvest sprays
Spotted wing drosophila
- Material
spinosad - Comments
Fall-bearing bramble cultivars are particularly susceptible. Insecticide treatment should begin when fruit first begins to color and continue through harvest. For more on SWD, see Lincoln University Cooperative Extension publication FS18A2013, Monitoring for Spotted Wing Drosophila (PDF). - Days between last application and harvest
Table 2
Tarnished plant bug
- Material
malathion
or esfenvalerate
or permethrin
or insecticidal soap - Comments
See comments in "pre-bloom sprays" section.
Apply every 14 days after petal-fall as needed.
Japanese beetle, green June beetle, rose chafer, sap beetles
- Material
carbaryl
or malathion
or permethrin
or pyrethrins and rotenone - Comments
Adult beetles feeding on ripening fruit and foliage. - Days between last application and harvest
Table 2
Orange rust
- Comments
In the early spring remove and destroy any infested plants, taking care to remove as much of the root system as possible.