| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Recognize this damage ? |
| Author | Comment |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
I have some figs growing very low to the ground and a few almost ripe ones have been eaten leaving just the stem attached with a little of the skin. |
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JoAnn749
Registered: Posts: 1,184 |
Since it was low, could it be a rabbit? |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Jo-Ann , |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
It looks like possum dentition more than any other. Rabbits and squirrels have serious front incisors. These figs in your photos were presumably very unripe and inedible? |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Yes Alexis , |
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go4broek
Registered: Posts: 1,200 |
Does it match the shape of any of your pets' mouth? The second pic looks like a bite from something with dull teeth (canine). |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
Say good evening to one some time and take a good look when she smiles back at you ;) |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
OMG! Possum's have bad memories to me. Long ago in another house, I kept fruit on a plate in the kitchen. Woke up to find bites in most of it. Did laundry, walked into the garage... POSSUM in the rafters!! You heard me scream over there in NH, right? |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
I think it might be slugs or snails working all night. I'd expect possums to have bigger teeth. |
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Herman2
Registered: Posts: 2,625 |
If they are close to ground it is field mouse,eating them. |
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Womack
Registered: Posts: 262 |
The most likely explanation to me is a mouse or chipmunk. Opossum are not particular enough to taste much of anything and turn it down. With so many types of wildlife that will eat ripe figs, the critter that ate the ripe figs may not be the same one that tasted the green ones. |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
https://mustlovefiction.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/possum.jpg |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Ruben , we do have a cat and I did wonder if it could be her. She has never shown any interest in the figs except to sleep under them. |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
Coyote. |
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Chivas
Registered: Posts: 1,675 |
Do you have a dog or cat? |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Jon , |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
OK, here is what you do. Prune the lower branches off into cuttings, and either sell them on Ebay or gift them for trades. Let that tree grow as tall as the bottom branch at waist high. Buy a ladder for the rest. |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Sounds like a plan Suzi. |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
I have seen those bite makrs. I took samples to the Ag Extension office and they had no idea. Basically my choices were skunk, possum, rabbit, coyote or some king of bird. |
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Figfinatic
Registered: Posts: 761 |
Could it be a rat? I let out a blood curdling scream too one night when I saw one near my cucumbers. Saw their teeth and foot tracks on them. Not growing those this year. |
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mgginva
Registered: Posts: 1,857 |
The first picture, at least, looks like slug damage to me. |
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gorgi
Registered: Posts: 2,864 |
woodlouse/sow bug/pill bug? |
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lukeott
Registered: Posts: 645 |
Stink bug. |
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5fignut6
Registered: Posts: 53 |
i don't know about your damage but i have small crickets eating the skin on my potted ripe figs for the first time ever! |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
Kerry, sure, you can send some cuttings to me! :-)) |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
Coyote or maybe fox. Jon is right, possums teeth are too sharp. It looked like the chips wasps take out but for the symmetry that identifies it as teeth. |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
The matching marks on both sides of the fig, which I can't seem to photograph clearly, do indicate an animals teeth . |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Forgot to mention the widest part of the bite mark measures about .75" |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
Oh! well, that's a baby Chupacabra then... |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
It was really puzzling me, so I did a web search. No self respecting opportunistic coyote on this earth would NOT eat the whole thing! They eat ANYTHING from rodents to vegetables to fruits. I doubt they would leave a trace. A 3/4" tooth mark means something big. |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Suzi , I meant to say 3/4" width of bite mark. So something sort of little I think. |
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landscapewitch
Registered: Posts: 195 |
Yep. Global warming. |
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lukeott
Registered: Posts: 645 |
bug marks, stick to that. If it was an animal, and the teeth marks are that big, it would have swallowed it whole. I don't know if bugs have teeth, but this is bug damage. |
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rookie
Registered: Posts: 384 |
I had some "damage" to my brown turkey,,,, it started on friday,,, holes pecked all through it,,,, a few more were almostttttt ripe so I left them. He got another one yesterday morning,,,, this morning I went out and there was the last one ,,,, all chewed up, grrrr. This time though he left a calling card,,, a bright red feather sitting on one of the branches,,,,, It's a cardinal judging from the feather,,,, I USED to like cardinals,,, now I'm at war with the bastid! Hitting home depot in a few minutes to get some netting, ugh. |
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Peg919
Registered: Posts: 179 |
Kerry, have you noticed any bees around your figs? I've had similar damage by both yellow and Black bees. The black bees did a job likke I've never seen before. At first glance the dark figs looked like they were covered with black ants that wouldn't brush off. Closer observation I watched black bees eating. The puckered up the skin and ate the insides. The yellow bees ate holes similar to what your picture shows. |
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drivewayfarmer
Registered: Posts: 773 |
Haven't seen any bees or wasps, etc. around any of my figs , but I am sure I could have missed some. |
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gorgi
Registered: Posts: 2,864 |
Once I did witness a few young (1/2 sized) pillbugs feasting on some semi-ripe fig skins. |
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