Skip to content
Adobestock 304939150 [converted]
October / November 2025

Extension briefs October and November 2025

SA Fruit Journal: October / November 2025

By Hannes Bester, MC Pretorius, Wayne Mommsen, Coenraad Fraenkel, André Combrink, Natasha Jackson, Jan Landman, and Rudolph Strydom (Citrus Research International)

Integrated pest management

(A. Manrakhan and S.D. Moore)

Thrips management During October and November citrus fruit is highly susceptible to damage from citrus thrips. Therefore, orchards should be scouted at least once a week for this pest, being sure to look under the sepals. Citrus thrips larvae cause more serious damage than adult thrips. Therefore, low numbers of adults in the absence of larvae may not require immediate intervention. The intervention threshold for citrus thrips larvae on fruit is 2% for the first four weeks after petal fall, 3% for five to six weeks after petal fall, then 4% for seven to eight weeks after petal fall. These thresholds can be roughly doubled if the population comprises mostly adults.

However, to make effective use of these thresholds, scouting especially under the calyx of fruit, must be accurate and reliable. Citrus thrips are genetically predisposed to developing resistance to pesticides, so avoid spraying two consecutive sprays of the same active ingredient. Treatments should be applied when intervention thresholds are exceeded. Treatments that give six to eight weeks’ thrips control will eliminate natural enemies of false codling moth (FCM), mealybug, and scale insects for at least a month. With this degree of required control, it is best to spray these at petal fall and to follow up with softer options when necessary.

Parasitoid releases Growers planning to augment parasitoids for mealybug, (i.e., Coccidoxenoides perminutus or Anagyrus vladimiri), red scale (i.e., Aphytis melinus) or FCM (i.e., Trichogrammatoidea cryptophlebiae) control, should initiate releases as early in the new season as possible. Augmentative releases of parasitoids are not a corrective option. Therefore, growers should not wait until the pest reaches a problematic level. Research trials with mealybug and FCM parasitoids indicate that better suppression of the pest is achieved with releases initiated as early as October, or at the latest, November.

Back To Top