Last summer, Mark Van Bourgondien, co-owner of CJ Van Bourgondien Wholesale Greenhouses in Peconic, on Long Island, noticed white flecks and slight discoloration on a few of his young poinsettias. He quickly found the culprit: tiny white Lewis mites, which he and others in the industry had dealt with before. But this time, the usual control, a miticide, didn't work.
Van Bourgondien called Cornell's Long Island Horticultural Research and Extension Center (LIHREC) – his go-to when problems arise. Dan Gilrein, associate agriculture program director and entomology specialist for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Suffolk County (CCE-Suffolk), collected samples – from Van Bourgondien and others in the region facing the same problem; back at LIHREC's greenhouse, he confirmed the mites' resistance and found an alternative treatment that could address the problem.
"We've been able to manage it with Dan's help," said Van Bourgondien, whose family has been in the greenhouse business since 1916. "There are always new challenges, and the people at LIHREC are always willing to help with whatever problems arise."
Lewis mites are just one of many potential threats and challenges to growing poinsettias, the colorful ornamental plant that is ubiquitous in holiday displays. The plants require careful calibration of the greenhouse environment – low humidity with moderate temperatures – and are susceptible to multiple types of root rot, poinsettia mosaic virus, foliar fungal diseases called poinsettia scab, powdery mildew and botrytis blight, bacterial leaf spots and infestations of different species of white flies and mites.
Many of these threats are introduced from cuttings shipped from overseas and show up at various stages of a long season, with ample time for problems to arise – growers plant in early summer and need the crop in peak condition for an extremely narrow window of sales in late November and early December.
"There's a real art to growing poinsettias, and the people who are doing it have often been doing it for generations," said Margery Daughtrey, senior extension associate and plant pathologist in the School of Integrative Plant Science in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. "They really care about the crop and do everything they can to protect it."
LIHREC, which is part of CALS and houses both CCE and academic department faculty and staff, is situated in a major hub of horticultural activity: Fifty to 60% of New York state's greenhouses are in Suffolk County. The Center helps growers diagnose problems – with poinsettias or any other crop – and find solutions informed by research.
"Things are always changing. Even things that have been around for a long time – if you bring in a new cultivar or variety, they might be more or less susceptible to any given problem. Or the pathogens or the insects themselves change," said Nora Catlin, agriculture program director and floriculture specialist for CCE-Suffolk and interim director at LIHREC. "It's always a very dynamic process."
Profit margins for poinsettias are thin, and their production in New York has declined over the last three decades. But growing poinsettias provides year-round work for the 120 to 130 full-time employees of Emma's Garden Growers, a Long Island plant wholesaler, and allows the business to maintain a connection to its customers, as well as boosting income going into the new year.
"A lot of people depend on this business – they want to be employed year-round – so that means: poinsettias," said co-owner Eric Keil, whose family has been in the horticulture business on Long Island for four generations. "The services at LIHREC are absolutely essential to our industry – I don't know how growers in other states really get by without this kind of support."
When further investigation is needed, the LIHREC team collaborates with New York State Integrated Pest Management (NYSIPM) in CALS and researchers on Ithaca's campus. In the case of this season's Lewis mites, Gilrein is continuing work with on-campus partners to understand the underlying mechanism of the mites' resistance, how it could affect future seasons and other crops, and what optimal controls could be used.
"We feel there are some newer controls that we haven't tried, so we're engaged in seeing how those perform and whether or not a biological control could work or could make sense," Gilrein said.
In addition to investigating unknown threats, LIHREC and NYSIPM provide ongoing support through regular meetings and crop-specific listservs and newsletters, sending out updates and reminders about best practices that can help growers, even in a "good" year, Daughtrey said. They hold relevant training, including NYSIPM's Greenhouse Scout School, a six-week online course on how to identify common pests and diseases in the greenhouse; many businesses enroll their employees.
Elise Lobdell, professional scout and instructor for New York State Integrated Pest Management's Greenhouse Scout School, inspects a poinsettia.
"It's a true collaboration across aspects at Cornell, from extension and research, with New York State IPM, and then with the growers. That's really what makes it work," said Betsy Lamb, senior extension associate and ornamentals coordinator for NYSIPM.
Solving a problem – or finding a culprit and ways to outwit it – is satisfying, Daughtrey said.
"And then it's good to provide that real information to the growers, where you're not just guessing but really solving problems and helping," she said.
The stunning beauty of the crop can also be its own reward. "When the plants are in the greenhouse, and they're lined up perfectly in their rows, all the same height and in full bloom, with all variations from white to peppermint to deep red – it's just awfully beautiful," Daughtrey said. "Especially on a snowy day, to walk in and see all that color. It's marvelous."
Van Bourgondien said only one thing is more beautiful: "At the end of the season, an empty bench is better looking than a full bench."
Source: Cornell Chronicle