Effective pest management strategies ensure the health and long-term success of agroforestry plantings. Good strategies rely on identifying and monitoring pests and continually assessing the impact of the problem.
The diseases and pests described here are common in the Canadian prairies.
Learn more on:
- Ash Flower Gall Mite
- Anthracnose
- Aphids
- Ash Borer
- Ash Plant Bug
- Asian Long-Horned Beetle
- Bacterial Blight
- Bacterial Wetwood (Slime Flux)
- Black Knot of Plum and Cherry
- Blister Beetles
- Boxelder Bug
- Boxelder Twig Borer
- Bronze Leaf
- Brown Spot Needle Blight
- Cankers on Poplars
- Cankerworm (Spring and Fall)
- Caragana Aphid
- Carpenterworm
- Chokecherry Leaf Spot
- Combat Wildlife Damage with Commonsense Control Methods
- Control of Borers in Planted Trees in the Prairie Provinces
- Cooley Spruce Gall Adelgid
- Cottonwood Leaf Beetle
- Crown/collar Rot & Shoot Blight
- Cytospora Canker
- Dorthiorella Wilt
- Dutch Elm Disease
- Elm Aphids
- Emerald Ash Borer
- Fall Webworm
- Fireblight
- Gray Willow Leaf Beetle
- Gymnosporangium Rust
- Honeysuckle Aphid
- Iron Chlorosis of Trees and Shrubs
- Larch Sawfly
- Leaf Spot
- Leafhoppers
- Leafminers
- Leafrollers and Leaftiers of Poplar
- Linden Looper
- Native Elm Bark Beetle
- Pine Needle Scale
- Plum Pockets
- Pocket Gophers
- Poplar and Willow Borer
- Powdery Mildew
- Protecting Trees from Animal Damage
- Rhizosphera Needlecast
- Scab and Black Canker of Willow
- Silver Leaf Disease of Trees and Shrubs
- Spruce Budworm
- Spruce Spider Mite
- Ugly Nest Caterpillar
- Verticillium Wilt
- Willow Redgall Sawfly
- Willow Sawfly
- Woolly Elm Aphid
- Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker
- Yellow-Headed Spruce Sawfly