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Warm Winter Weather May Bring Pest-Filled Spring

First Posted: 03/ 6/2012 2:02 am Updated: 03/ 6/2012 8:23 am

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — The mild winter that has given many Northern farmers a break from shoveling and a welcome chance to catch up on maintenance could lead to a tough spring as many pests that would normally freeze, have not.

Winters are usually what one agriculture specialist calls a "reset button" that gives farmer a fresh start come planting season. But with relatively mild temperatures and little snow, insects are surviving, growing and, in some areas, already munching on budding plants.

Almost every state had a warmer-than-usual January, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In Albany, N.Y., for example, the average high in January was 37 degrees, when it's usually less than freezing, according to the National Weather Service. In Tulsa, Okla., the average high last month was about 57 degrees, 9 degrees higher than normal.

The Upper Midwest, Great Plains and a few other areas were "much above normal" in temperature, NOAA said.

Dawn Allen, who has an 89-year-old, family-run bog in Freetown, Mass., said her family will likely start sweeping bogs with a contraption similar to a butterfly net in April to catch winter moth caterpillars, instead of waiting until mid-May, when they typically start. The winter moth caterpillars are aggressive and eat buds, potentially ruining a crop for a whole year.

"It's a big stress factor that gets us out on the bog early," said Allen, whose farm sells cranberries for juice and pulp converted into cranberry vitamins.

Martha Sylvia, a research technician at the University of Massachusetts cranberry station, said growers should expect to start spraying earlier and more often because there's "definitely an upswing" in winter moths, she said.

"We just know we're in for it," Sylvia said.

Tim Tucker, a beekeeper in Niotaze, Kan., said he saw flies in February when "all flies should be gone" and bumble bees that usually don't appear until May or June. The warm weather hasn't been entirely good for beekeeping, though. Usually, queen bees won't lay eggs in the cold, but this year, his hives have been active.

"This year, we have some hives that raised bees all winter," Tucker said. "I don't think they ever stopped."

Because so many bees are being raised, Tucker has had to buy supplemental food, such as sucrose, so they don't eat all the honey he wants to sell.

While bees are good for pollination, many of the insects that are surviving have a destructive bent, such as the bean leaf beetle that targets soybeans, corn flea beetle that damages corn, and the alfalfa weevil. Those insects live close to the surface of the ground so the mild temperatures give them a head start, said Christian Krupke, a Purdue University entomologist.

"Winter is like a big reset button for the Midwest," Krupke said. "It wipes out lots of insects usually."

However, the warmer temperatures generally don't affect insects that spend their winters burrowed deep into the ground, he said. And some insects may be threatened by a lack of snow.

Erin Hodgson, an entomologist at Iowa State University, said a drought there due to a lack of snow could threaten boxelder bugs and beetles, who will die if food fails to emerge. And insects that pass the winter in dormancy above ground could die of dehydration or starvation without the insulating cover of snow, she said.

"Making predictions about overall insects surviving or not can be kind of tricky," Hodgson said.

But the warmer weather hasn't been all bad, said Henry Talmage, executive director of the Connecticut Farm Bureau. He compared this winter with last year, when southern New England endured back-to-back snow storms and an ice storm. In early February 2011, farmers in Connecticut lost nearly 150 barns and other structures as feet of snow accumulated. Those in Massachusetts and upstate New York also struggled with roof collapses.

This year, farmers were able to spend the winter working outside, maintaining equipment and buildings, Talmage said.

"Instead of shoveling snow, farmers can do something more productive," Talmage said. "Nobody is complaining. We're all happy at this point it's been as mild as it has been."

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HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — The mild winter that has given many Northern farmers a break from shoveling and a welcome chance to catch up on maintenance could lead to a tough spring as many pests that wou...
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — The mild winter that has given many Northern farmers a break from shoveling and a welcome chance to catch up on maintenance could lead to a tough spring as many pests that wou...
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Winterseeker
For the trees...we need them, not vice versa.
07:22 AM on 03/08/2012
Considering some places were 9 degrees above normal, I sincerely hope no records are broken in a similar fashion come summer...this will be a mighty year for invasives and forest fires if this trend continues...lets just hope there is no drought in the mix too - but I guess we can't stop what we've started just by hoping/
04:15 PM on 03/07/2012
Today the low in my area was -18C and the high was +15.5C. Now that is the strangest winter I have had since I moved to this area 4 yrs ago. Hardly any snow but lots of rain. The is almost eerie. I'm just wondering what we are in for this summer. Weeds will be abundant again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
02:55 PM on 03/07/2012
This planet was meant to have four distinct seasons of Weather which used to regulate the way nature behaves. This mild winter IS going to cause outbreaks of pestilence in the spring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanielaFearless
Don't P on my head & tell me it's raining.
01:51 PM on 03/07/2012
Great, this is going to be one hard gardening year!
04:11 PM on 03/07/2012
Get your combat gear ready. We will need it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanielaFearless
Don't P on my head & tell me it's raining.
05:04 PM on 03/07/2012
Sure sounds like it!
08:16 AM on 03/07/2012
So this means many dry counties will be even drier this summer. So no more 30 minute showers eh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
HedgeHog Power!
07:07 AM on 03/07/2012
Global warming, here we come!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SoCal John
07:08 PM on 03/07/2012
Global Climate Change...global warming confuses the right whenever they see snow...;)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pixeloid
Reality has a liberal bias.
02:52 AM on 03/07/2012
A mild, snowless winter also means a drought problem.
marcdostl
Diogenesian & Classical Liberal
01:26 AM on 03/07/2012
Don't tell the Europeans and Russians about their Warm Winter.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
07:46 PM on 03/06/2012
All of the trees and shrubs I planted last fall loved the warm wet winter. Hooray for climate change!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
HedgeHog Power!
07:06 AM on 03/07/2012
Wait till summer, It will be brutal!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
07:19 AM on 03/07/2012
That's what ac and hoses are for.
Conga
Never fight a woman who owns her own chainsaw
07:45 PM on 03/06/2012
Can't say if this has anything to do with climate change per se, but the danger is very real.

Witness the entire West's battles with various types of bark beetles. What happened is that a normal ordinary pest was able to "swarm" so to speak like a plague of locusts.

It was set up by two factors, drought and warm winters.

The drought many states experienced, especially my area, caused less amounts of sap to be produced. During times of adequate rainfall the tree would produce enough sap to drown the borers out in self-defense.

Warm winters allowed more of the borers to over-winter. Usually most would die each winter due to freezing temps. This didn't happen in many places and again for years. Too many lived and over-tipped the balance and we wound up with millions upon millions of trees being destroyed.
Conga
Never fight a woman who owns her own chainsaw
07:57 PM on 03/06/2012
Now I'll be fair and point out that is a repeated event through history and while hundreds of trees were taken out in my area most agreed we were dangerously high due to density, totally unnatural and unsupportable in a dry climate. The remaining cedars, two types of oaks and dogwoods are thriving thanks to the space and a higher share of the ground and rain water. Later things will change again favoring other trees/underbrush and we'll probably wind up here again one day.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
motoGpifupleez
watching with amusement
07:36 PM on 03/06/2012
It's all a part of the joys of Global Climatic Disruption. Mother Nature and the Earth are just showing their Liberal viewpoints, that's all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
02:58 PM on 03/07/2012
More like tr0// viewpoints I'd think.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
04:00 PM on 03/06/2012
I've been Buzz Killignton about the warm winter on my facebook mentioning the upcoming pest season.
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eaarth2
“An era ends when its illusions are exhausted
12:02 PM on 03/06/2012
I live just east of Hartford- my windmill palms in the garden are doing just great. Palms in Connecticut? Yep.
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grappler1987
Heaven is a gift, not a reward
11:45 AM on 03/06/2012
"The Consequences Of A Warm Winter"

One is reduced mortality ... less death due to influenza, heart attacks, and stroke. Take the good with the bad.

Or maybe mortality will reduce in America due to warmth and rise in Europe due to the cold. Who knows?
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Exusian
Nature bats last
01:55 PM on 03/06/2012
"One is reduced mortality ... less death due to influenza, heart attacks, and stroke."

True, that is good, but it also means an earlier start to tornado season.
And it will likely mean a dry summer and low water table in some places.
03:59 PM on 03/06/2012
Less snow. Quicker snow melt. Less water in the west. More fires.

More heat and more "skeeters" here in Texas.

Glad I've got a pool... It is what it is.
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yeti7
don't need no stink'n badges
02:46 PM on 03/06/2012
so this is the first warm winter?
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grappler1987
Heaven is a gift, not a reward
03:05 PM on 03/06/2012
No. Statistics show that 50% are warmer than the median. :)
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dadoorsron
06:21 PM on 03/06/2012
In Chicago it's the 28th Warmest on record in 128 years. Their have been Warmer winters in the past.
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Mississippi Red
Stoke City: ugly football that works
11:34 AM on 03/06/2012
The Year of the Skeeter is upon us!

Well, I will be researching pine beetles this summer- I need to collect about a thousand and maybe the warm winter will make that job a bit easier.
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grappler1987
Heaven is a gift, not a reward
11:47 AM on 03/06/2012
I wonder what the early thaw followed by a freeze may have done. If the pests came out early, they may have froze to death. The same problem is occurring with my plants.

Sounds like fun research. Enjoy.