Q. We bought this house about two years ago. There was
this rose already planted. I noticed last
summer the leaves get a shiny look on them and a sticky feel. We had roses at
other house never saw this before. Do you have any idea what it is and what to
do?
Horticultural oil for the winter months |
A. This usually means it is one of the sap-sucking
insects feeding on leaves, soft stems, and flower buds. Sometimes flower
petals. These insects suck on plant juices by piercing the plant and causing
physical damage and/or transmitting diseases.
They use the plant juices for
their sugar content but can't use it all so they poop it out the backend as a
sticky, shiny excrement. This sugary excrement attracts ants. The answer
learned that if they protect these plant juice-sucking insects from other
insects that might hurt them they can group them together and treat them like
we would treat dairy cattle.
They have also learned that they can move the
immature of these insects to new locations and spread them out and get an even
greater benefit from them. We would call it expansion to improve their
"economy of scale".
The list of insects include aphids, whiteflies,
mealybugs, and the scale insects. Perhaps even thrips. The number one insect on
roses during cool weather is aphids. In hot weather it is usually whiteflies
because aphids do not like hot weather like whiteflies do and aphid numbers
dwindle while whitefly numbers are on the rise.
Besides giving off the sticky
shiny excrement, aphids cause immature leaves to begin to curl as they grow
giving them even more protection since the curled leaf also protects the
"herd". Adult whiteflies are pretty good flyers and when the plant
leaves are disturbed they usually take flight looking like a bunch of flying
white dandruff. Least common are mealybugs and scale insects.
Here is the protocol I would use for growing roses here
and controlling their insect pests.
• During
the winter months and early spring months spray roses with horticultural oil
twice, about a month apart, covering the entire plant.
• During
February, March and possibly April spray the bottom sides of expanding leaves
with insecticidal soap and control ants. I would spray 2 to 4 weeks apart
depending on whether I saw a problem developing.
• As a
flower buds are developing, spray with Spinosad for thrips control if thrips
are causing damage to flower buds.
Pyrethrum-based insecticide |
• As warm
weather is developing, inspect the plant for whiteflies and damage from
whiteflies. Control ants. Spray with pyrethrum based insecticides or use
insecticidal soap until they are
controlled.
An alternative is to use a conventional insecticide that
contains imidacloprid and apply it to the soil as a liquid drench at the
beginning of the season. I am not a big fan of this insecticide for flowering
plants. It has been implicated in colony collapse disorder for honeybees.
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