Eastern New York Commercial Horticulture Enrollment

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Allium Leafminer Active in Southern Pennsylvania

Teresa Rusinek, Vegetable Specialist
Eastern New York Commercial Horticulture

April 18, 2018

A new invasive insect pest in the Northeast known as the Allium leafminer (ALM), Phytomyza gymnostoma, damages crops in the Allium genus (e.g., onion, garlic, leek, scallions, shallots, and chives) and is considered a major economic threat to Allium growers. Originally from Europe, ALM was first detected in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania in December of 2015 and in New Jersey and New York in 2016. As of fall 2017, ALM activity has been confirmed throughout eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, southeastern New York as well as Tompkins and Suffolk counties.

ALM is currently active in Lancaster, PA where the first signs of adult fly emergence were detected on April 13, 2018. Based on our observations from last spring in the Hudson Valley, we expect emergence in our area in the next week or so.  ALM will continue to emerge, feed and lay eggs in alliums over about 4 weeks.  Leaf mining from larvae will begin to show up within two weeks after first adult emergence and intensify over the duration of the flight.  The larvae mine their way toward the base of the allium plant where they will pupate. 

Growers who have alliums with green tissue growing in the field or in high tunnels now in southeastern New York should consider protective measures soon, especially in Orange, Ulster, Dutchess, Columbia, Sullivan, and Schoharie counties where significant infestations were observed last year.  If you have small plantings that can be covered with row cover to exclude emerging ALM flies, now is the time to do so as long as you didn't have infested alliums (including wild onion grass) in the same space last season.   Growers with larger plantings may consider applications of insecticides if and when significant ALM activity is observed in the allium crop. There are both organic and conventional insecticides labeled for allium crops to control this type of leafminer.  Insecticide efficacy tests are currently being conducted in both New York and Pennsylvania. It is important to carefully observe your allium crops over the next few weeks.  ALM oviposition/feeding may initially be observed along field edges. Be vigilant and please call  or email either Teresa Rusinek  at 845 389-3562, tr28@cornell.edu  or Ethan Grundberg at  617 455-1893, eg572@cornell.edu  if you see evidence of ALM feeding or have any questions about management. 



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Upcoming Events

Blind Industry White Wine Tasting Workshop

April 1, 2025 : Blind Industry White Wine Tasting Workshop
Germantown, NY

This event is a blind wine tasting for ENY grape industry members to get feedback from fellow growers and Cornell Enologists on unfinished white wines (hybrid, vinifera, etc.)

We respectfully request that only professional winemakers or commercial vineyard owners attend, as space is limited. Limit two wines per winery/vineyard.

Pre-registration is required.  For questions, please contact Jeremy Schuster at jds544@cornell.edu

View Blind Industry White Wine Tasting Workshop Details

Announcements

2025 CCE ENYCHP Subscriptions and Guidelines

2025 Guidelines and CCE ENYCHP Subscriptions

We just wanted to let everyone know that the 2025 Cornell Guides for Integrated Pest Management (aka The Recommends), will not be available in either print or online versions until the end of March at the earliest, with many not releasing until April. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. This is also why we were delaying the Eastern NY Commercial Horticulture Subscription notice as we offer the ability for you to order those Management Guidelines through our program. Below is the link to the 2025 CCE ENYCHP Subscription form as well as a link to our 2024 Annual Report.

For questions or comments, please contact Chuck Bornt at 518-859-6213 or cdb13@cornell.edu 

Thank you and have a great 2025 season!

2025 CCE ENYCHP Subscription Form

2023-2024 CCE ENYCHP Annual Report



Resources from CCE ENYCHP!


This website (https://enych.cce.cornell.edu/) contains our calendar of upcoming programs and registration links. For updated programmatic information, technical resources and links to newsletters please see our program blog site: https://blogs.cornell.edu/enychp/.
We also maintain the following online resources that you can view directly from these links:

• CCE ENYCH YouTube (program videos): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSk_E-ZKqSClcas49Cnvxkw

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