June 23, 2017 CapitalPress.com Subscribe to our weekly California email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters California Researcher uses tiny predators, drones against strawberry pest By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press DAVIS, Calif. — A uni- versity researcher is working to enhance the effectiveness of a natural treatment against spider mites, a major pest in California’s strawberry fields. Chemical ecologist Elvi- ra Simone de Lange of the University of California-Da- vis has received a three-year, $249,878 federal grant to use drones to detect spider mite-related plant stress and then target the pests with nat- ural predators. The predatory mites are already widely used in the strawberry industry but can die quickly if they don’t find prey, said de Lange, a post- doctoral researcher in the UC-Davis Department of En- tomology and Nematology. The drones can examine large swaths of land all at once and detect subtle dif- ferences in the reflectance of the strawberry canopy, which indicates spider mite-induced stress, she said. “The project goal is to demonstrate that drones can Photo courtesy of UCANR Chemical ecologist Elvira de Lange works in the Christian Nansen Laboratory at the University of California-Davis. She is studying the use of natural predators to combat spider mites in strawberry fields. be used to improve spider mite management and con- trol, while at the same time reducing the need for and reli- ance on miticides,” de Lange said in an email. The drones used for the project would be too expen- sive for most growers to pur- chase, but agricultural con- sulting companies could offer the service to growers, she said. The grant is from the USDA’s Western Sustainable Agriculture Research and Ed- ucation Program — known by the acronym SARE — and will fund research through March 2020, according to a university news release. The project comes as or- ganic strawberry acreage in California has increased rap- idly each year since 2000 as growers have moved away from fumigants and pesti- cides, although organic yields have lagged behind those of conventionally managed farms. But de Lange’s project could help all strawberry growers, as mites are not con- trolled by fumigation, noted Carolyn O’Donnell, spokes- woman for the California Strawberry Commission. Several species of spider mites infest the state’s straw- berry fields, but the two-spot- ted mite — Tetranychus ur- ticae — is the predominant species affecting fields on the Central Coast, according to the UC’s Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program. The mites suck plant juic- es, resulting in smaller berries and reduced yield. Mite-feed- ing symptoms include dense webbing and dry, brittle and discolored leaves, the UC ex- plains. “Spider mites are a prob- lem that can come and go, depending on field sanitation … and weather conditions,” O’Donnell said, noting that keeping weeds under control can make a difference. Experts outline nonlethal measures to prevent wolves from killing cattle By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press HAT CREEK, Calif. — In late 2015, seventh-generation rancher Jessica Oddo’s family was “unnerved” by California’s first suspected wolf depredation of a calf in Siskiyou County. So last year, Oddo was among several far Northern California ranchers to attend a California Wolf Center-spon- sored training in Montana to become range riders. The riders take turns go- ing out several times a week looking for tracks, scat or oth- er signs of wolves and other wildlife that could harm cat- tle, which enables producers to move their livestock out of danger if possible. For Oddo, having a human presence around to watch for any wolf activity is best because it helps ranchers re- spond more quickly than if they wait to be notified by state wildlife managers, she said. “One of the most valuable things the California Wolf Center gave us was (access to) a number of people who have a long history of dealing with wolves and livestock,” Oddo told about 60 ranch- ers at a June 14 workshop on wolf-livestock conflicts. “That’s been the problem for us, that this is so new.” The range rider program was one of about a half-dozen nonlethal measures for deal- ing with wolves highlighted at the all-day workshop. The event, hosted by Shasta Coun- ty, was held at a fire hall and nearby cattle ranch in Hat Creek, about 70 miles north- east of Redding. Livestock producers, gov- ernment officials and univer- sity researchers gave detailed remarks about how to manage herds and put up safeguards to deter wolves and other preda- tors. Among their advice: • Managing herds so they learn to stay together can give them safety in numbers, said Matt Barnes, a Bozeman, Mont.-based rangeland con- sultant. Wolves are less likely to attack a large herd, but scat- tered animals are easy prey, he said. With one herd he man- aged, “we were right next to a coyote den … and the cows could mob up and run coyotes off,” Barnes said. • Some producers cordon off their grazing cattle or sheep with fladry — a line of electrified cable with brightly colored flags that flap in the breeze. If the flags don’t dis- courage predators, the slight electric shock from the cable might. But fladry is expensive, costing about $3,400 to pro- tect a 40-acre pasture, and “we don’t like to keep it up for too long because the novelty of it” will wear off, said John Steuber, the Montana state director for USDA Wildlife Services. • When a depredation or animal death does occur, it’s best to remove the carcass as 7 soon as possible so it doesn’t attract more predators, Shas- ta County agricultural com- missioner Paul Kjos said. But it’s illegal in California to bury carcasses, and the near- est rendering facilities are in Sacramento or Portland, he said. The information from the presenters was valuable, said Betty Stephenson, whose family has been ranching near Bella Vista, Calif., since the 1850s. The operation hasn’t encountered wolves, but large dogs have killed a couple of calves, she said. “This is the first meeting we’ve attended” on wolf-live- stock conflicts, she said. “We just want to know what’s go- ing on. We want to know le- gally what ranches can do.” Cattlemen to urge Trump to reconsider monuments that impact grazing By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press SACRAMENTO — A cattlemen’s group wants President Donald Trump’s administration to recon- sider national monument designations in California that have greatly impacted grazing. The California Cattle- men’s Association is pre- paring remarks to submit during a public comment period, which runs through July 10, that will detail what it sees as negative impacts from the designa- tions under the Antiquities Act. The organization wants to hear from ranchers with allotments on the lands that have been affected. “We’re actually going to be advocating for most of the monuments that were listed in the (Federal) Reg- ister to not necessarily be rescinded, but to be dimin- ished in size to an appropri- ate level,” said Kirk Wilbur, the CCA’s director of gov- ernment affairs. In particular, the CCA would like Trump to recon- sider the California Coastal National Monument, which was designated in 2000 by President Bill Clinton and later expanded by President Barack Obama. The des- ignation protects various segments of the coastline from Humboldt County to Orange County. “It’s less than 100,000 acres in total, so it wasn’t included” in Trump’s order, Wilbur said. “But a lot of grazing land is impacted there. There is some suggestion from my members and from news articles that when the Obama administration ex- panded that, they were not all that responsive to the concerns of local commu- nities.” Nearly a dozen new monument designations covering more than 3 mil- lion acres have been made in the state during the last two decades, according to the California Farm Bureau Federation. The CCA argues that while the Antiquities Act was originally intended to protect historic landmarks and other objects of his- toric or scientific inter- est, recent presidents have used it to bypass Congress and local communities and place heavy restric- tions on massive areas of land. Obama used the Antiq- uities Act more than any previous president, locking up 256 million acres of land and water in 30 separate designations, according to the CCA. While language in the designations often allows for grazing, invariably those grazing rights are sig- nificantly curtailed, Wilbur said. “We’re not calling for a wholesale reversal of na- tional monument deigna- tions,” he said. “I think we recognize there are certain antiquities in a lot of these national monuments that should be protected. But we’re talking about protect- ing historical or cultural rel- ics, not necessarily tens of thousands of acres.” Producers whose graz- ing operations have been impacted by monument designations are urged to call the CCA at (916) 444- 0845. John Deere Dealers See one of these dealers for a demonstration 25-1/#4N