Tree Squad gets rid of Scales

The following scales are common on landscape trees throughout the Twin Cities. Most scale identification will require an experienced professional with a hand lens in order to be correctly identified.

Scurfy Scale  (Chionaspis furfura)

Attacks: 
young elms, apple, willow, and dogwood

What you will see:

  • Limb dieback on young trees
  • Small elongate (1/10"), dirty white, pear shaped scales
  • Scales lay flat against the bark

Life cycle:

  • Overwinter as adult females
  • Lay eggs in the spring
  • Crawler hatch and emergence occurs in May

Cultural Practices:

  • Maintain tree health
  • Reduce water stress
  • Root enhancement system
  • Mulch


Chemical Treatments:

  • Systemic soil application
  • Horticultural oils in Fall
  • Crawler sprays
 

Obscure Scale  (Melanaspis obscura)

Attacks:
Pin and red oaks

What you will see:

  • Dieback on small branches
  • Small (1/16"), round gray scales
  • Twigs appear covered with silver shells
  • Scales have a black central nipple


Life cycle:

  • Overwinter as nymphs
  • Adults develop in the spring
  • Mate and lay eggs in May& June
  • Crawler hatch and emergence occurs in mid to late July

Cultural Practices:

  • Maintain tree health
  • Reduce water stress
  • Root enhancement system
  • Mulch


Chemical Treatments:

  • Systemic soil application
  • Horticultural oils in Fall
  • Crawler sprays
 

Oystershell Scale  (Lepidosaphes ulmi)

Attacks:
Lilac, ash, birch, boxwood, elm, maple, poplar, cotoneaster, willow and many other deciduous trees and shrubs

What you will see:

  • Dieback in small and large limbs
  • Adult female convex, oystershell-shaped
  • Gray to brown in color
  • Eggs and crawlers are white


Life cycle:

  • Overwinter as eggs
  • Crawlers hatch in late May to early June
  • Nymphs mature in late summer to mate
  • Eggs are laid in the summer to early fall

Cultural Practices:

  • Maintain tree health
  • Reduce water stress
  • Root enhancement system
  • Mulch
     

Chemical Treatments:

  • Systemic soil injection
  • Horticultural oils in Fall
  • Crawler sprays
 

Spruce/Pine Needle Scale  (Chionaspis pinifoliae)

Attacks:
Colorado, Norway, white spruce, Arborvitae, cedars, Douglas fir, Hemlock, Junipers, Larch, and Pine.

What you will see:

  • Thin sparse needles
  • White spots on needles
  • White, waxy scale covering
  • Small infestations can increase within one growing season
  • Extensive needle and branch mortality


Life cycle:

  • Red-colored eggs over-winter under the scale covering
  • Eggs hatch in late-May / early June
  • The new crawlers emerge over two week period
  • After mating, the males die and females and produce eggs
  • Two generations per year
  • Second emergence of crawlers appears in late July
  • Each female produces over 100 eggs

Cultural Practices:

  • Maintain tree health
  •  Reduce water stress
  •  Root enhancement system
  •  Mulch
     

Chemical Treatments:

  • Systemic soil injection
  • Horticultural oils in Fall (on non-blue cultivars)
  • Crawler sprays
     
 

Oak Pit Scale (Asterolecanium minus)

Attacks:
English Oak and White oaks

What you will see:

  • Immature small yellow scales
  • Mature adult pits (raised bark around the scale)
  • Dead limbs
  • Dieback of small branches
     

Life cycle:

  • Oak pit scales overwinter as adults
  • Scale nymphs (crawlers) are produced starting June
  • Crawlers can be produced for as long as five months
  • The highest crawler population occurs in early summer
  • Crawlers colonize current season and one year old wood
  • One generation per year

Cultural management:

  • Ineffective with large populations
  • Enhance tree vigor to replace infected tissue
     

Chemical Management:

  • Systemic soil injections
  • Horticultural oils
  • Long residual insecticides (must time for crawler stages)
 

Management of armored scales is more difficult than for soft scales and aphids, since their hard shells protect them from most topical insecticides. Fortunately there are insecticides that can be used to systemically treat hard scales. The scales ingest this insecticide while feeding and one treatment will usually provide enough control to reduce most hard scale populations to non-damaging levels.

In severe scale infestations this soil injection treatment should be combined with a growing season spray for the susceptible crawler stage of the scale species followed by a late season horticultural oil spray to suffocate any remaining over-wintering scales. Horticultural oils should not be applied when the temperature will be above 80° F or on plants with a blue coloration. Oils will remove the blue color from blue spruce, fir and other plants where the wax is blue.