About
Welcome to the BLUE-CRAN-ENT Lab |
I head the Entomology Research and Extension Program at the Rutgers Marucci Blueberry and Cranberry Research and Extension Center in Chatsworth, New Jersey.
The goal of my research program is the development and implementation of cost-effective reduced-risk insect pest management practices for blueberries and cranberries. This goal is achieved through the integration of chemical, behavioral, and biological methods in insect control and a better understanding on the ecology of insect herbivores and their natural enemies. My extension program delivers pest management information to growers by conducting on-farm demonstration trials, presentations, and extension publications.
I am a Graduate Faculty in the Departments of Entomology and Ecology & Evolution, ResearchGate and
Link to my Marucci Center’s website.
Click here for my CV
Contact Information
Cesar Rodriguez-Saona
Rutgers University
Philip E. Marucci Blueberry and Cranberry Research Center
125a Lake Oswego
Chatsworth, NJ 08019 U.S.A.
Email: crodriguez@njaes.rutgers.edu
Phone: (609) 726-2531
Fax: (609) 726-1593
We Are In The News
- Supporting a “Special” Specialty Crop: How IR-4 Helps Cranberry Growers Succeed
- Extension Specialist Cesar Rodriguez-Saona Awarded USDA Grant for Integrated Pest Management of Blueberry
- Rutgers Doctoral Student, Jae Kerstetter, Awarded Prestigious SARE Grant
- Growers helping growers avoid a devastating cranberry disease.
- Wasps That Kill Berry Pest Come to Mid-Atlantic. Click here.
- Watch us in “Profiles in STEM with Dr. Rodriguez-Saona“
- Fungus versus flies: Following a scent towards insecticide-free pest management. Click here.
- Entomology Today “Hot Competition: Climate Change, Invasive Fly Displace a Native Blueberry Pest”
- Dr. Rodriguez-Saona was elected P-IE Section Vice President-Elect for the Entomological Society of America
- Students win Prestigious Awards at the Virtual Entomology Society of America’s National Meeting
- Plum curculio: IPM recommendations.
- Plant droplets serve as nutrient-rich food for insects (please click each title):
- Spotted wing drosophila project looks beyond chemical controls for blueberries. Click here.
- How farmers in New Jersey’s Pinelands grapple with the environmental toll of Thanksgiving cranberries. Click here.
- Dean’s October report, State Board of Ag – Fruit IPM program project, Area-Wide Pest Management Program to Improve Honey Bee Health in Blueberry and Cranberry Pollination Services. Click Here.
- Lanternfly migration could mean trouble for New Jersey. Click here.
- Entomology Students Honored at Entomology Society Meeting. Click here.
- Biopesticide Efficacy Trials Funded by the IR-4 Project (see pages 6-7). Click here.
- Biopesticide Program Finds Promising Solutions for Organic Growers (see pages 4-5). Click Here.
- Plum Curculio Aggregation Pheromone (see page 6). Click Here.
- An Agricultural Balancing Act: A look at the biological control consequences of crop domestication. Click here.
- Researchers Seek Ways to Fight Insect. Click here.
- Blueberry farmers share latest pest-control strategies in Hammonton. Click here