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Stage 1 Fire Restrictions enacted

Effective beginning 12:01 a.m. Friday, June 12, 2026, until further notice. These restrictions apply to all private land and BLM managed public lands within the boundaries of the Grand Junction Field Office. For more information visit the Fire Restrictions webpage.

Pear Psylla on branch

Image credit: Bruce Watt, University of Maine, Bugwood.org

Pear Psylla specimen

 Image credit: Charles Olsen, Charles Olsen Insect Collection, USDA APHIS PPQ, Bugwood.org

Pear Psylla (Cacopsylla pyricola)

Identification

  • Small, oval, creamy white to yellow eggs can be found before buds open at the base of terminals and fruit spurs.
  • Adult pictured above is similar in size to a fruit fly.

Reasons for Control

  • As a sap-sucker, the insect can stunt, defoliate, and/or kill pear trees when present in large numbers.
  • Excretions support fungal growth that blackens trees and discolors fruit.
  • Disease vector for Pear Decline, leading to unproductive plantings.

Control Notes

  • Usually controlled in the early spring with dormant oil applications targeting the egg stage.