Cotton - Always be on the look out for weevils that resemble the Boll Weevil. For a refresher on how to Identify the BW see:
http://www.ento.vt.edu/Facilities/OnCampus/IDLab/bollweevil/bollweev.html
**Last Year**Cotton - The smartweed borer, Ostrinia obumbratilis, a close relative of the European corn borer has been observed causing minor some damage to the leaf petioles of cotton. This insect normally feeds on large stem weeds but will move over to cotton and corn to find an overwintering site. They seek these sites now even though it is still the hot growing season (I guess insects are thinking of cold weather too). The damage to cotton should be very minor and the insect in the field is identical to the European corn borer. Any suspect insects can be sent to the Insect Identification Lab.
Corn Earworm Survey - This week and next the bulk of the annual corn earworm survey will be conducted by Jack Speese, Glenn Chappell, Ames Herbert, Mike Arrington and myself. We will have the results and predictions for soybeans in the next few weeks. (Alex Spring, my assistant, will be running the I.D. Lab the first part of next week)
Obscure Scale Crawlers are active now. Their activity generally peaks in mid-July on red oaks and mid-August on white oaks. Spraying for crawlers is rough at best. Since they are coming out over a long period of time. Dormant oil in the winter is still best but in severe cases a crawler spray may help. See the fact sheet in the 3-ring binder.
Spittle bugs on pine can be controlled now IF you had tip die-back last fall AND IF there were large number of spittle masses on the trees this spring. Cygon should give good control.
2-Spotted Spider Mite on Ivy from two counties this week. Look for yellowing and brown spots on the leaves. Treat with kelthane if small mites are found on leaves. Look also for small eggs near the mid-rib of the leaf.
Flea Beetles on Sweetcorn -Look for narrow brown stripes made by flea beetles as they skeletonize the leaves. Flea beetles are often associated with Stewarts Wilt.
Don't forget the New Vegetable Pest Website, as pest inquiries come into your office. See:
http://viner.ento.vt.edu/~idlab/vegpests/veg1.html
Scouting Tips for August below:
Eric Day Manager, Insect Identification Laboratory (540) 231-4899
Insect:Host(s) Description Treatment timing*
FIELD AND VEGETABLE CROPS
Blister Beetles: Slender beetles 1-2" in Beetles usually appear
Potato, tomato, length which may be black suddenly and may cause
melon, eggplant, with white margins or black much damage before
sweet potato, and yellow striped. They they are detected.
bean, pea, and feed on the flowers and Spot treatments when
many other crops foliage. they are found will
give good control.
Cabbage Looper: Green larva with three Insecticide or "Bt"
Crucifers sets of prolegs and white applications made on
stripes running the length 7-day intervals are
of its body. When it crawls necessary to control
it moves like an inchworm. this insect.
Colorado Potato Adults are yellow with For small gardens,
Beetle: brown stripes, they are beetles can be removed
Potato, tomato, oval-convex in shape. The by hand-picking;
eggplant,pepper, larva is yellowish red or larger areas or heavy
tobacco, and orange and has a row of infestations will
other solan- black spots along each side require the use of
aceous plants of its body. insecticides.
Corn Earworm: Earworm larvae have a wide Based on a survey conduct-
Soybeans range of colors, from ed July 19-28, corn
pale yellow to dark brown; earworms are expected
many are greenish. They to be at high levels
all have pale stripes and this year on soybeans.
orange-yellow heads. Scout all your soybean
fields, especially
ones with open
canopies, on a regular
basis and treat if
necessary. See Report
at the end of this
issue.
Cowpea Curculio: This weevil is 1/4" long, Late planted crops tend to
Beans and peas blackish-bronze in color, be less severely attacked.
and has a humpbacked Crop rotation and sanita-
appearance. Adult beetles tion also help in control.
puncture the pods and lay Commercial beans will need
eggs on the seed. This chemical control starting
insect tends to be a when blooms first appear.
problem in home gardens
and minor in commercial
plantings.
Cucumber Beetle: Two beetles feed on cucur- Foliar sprays
Cucumber, can- bits in Virginia: the spot- may be necessary in some
taloupes, gourd, ted cuc. beetle is pale cases. To prevent bac-
squash, and green with black spots on terial wilt treat when 1
watermelon are its wing covers; the beetle per 100 row feet
preferred hosts. striped cuc. beetle is pale is found.
They are found green with black stripes
on other crops on its wing covers. Both
but are not as transmit bacterial wilt of
important. cucurbits.
Fall Armyworm: Tan to dark larvae with For corn and sorghum treat
Corn and other light colored longitudinal when 80% of the plants have
grasses as well stripes on its back, as at least one caterpillar,
as many well as an inverted "Y" or if there are two or more
vegetable crops on its head. Start scouting caterpillars treat corn
late July and August. when 40% infested and
sorghum when 50% infested.
Grasshoppers: The Differential Grass- Avoid mowing border areas
All crops hopper is dark green with with heavy grass and weed
yellow bands. The Red- growth; grasshoppers will
legged Grasshopper has red move from those areas to
legs. Grasshopper damage the crop plants after their
leaves are jagged and host plants have been cut
tattered. down. Treat with an
insecticide if damage
becomes severe.
Imported Velvet green larvae with a Treat when caterpillar
Cabbageworm: faint yellow stripe down populations reach a thresh-
Cabbage, broc- the back and a row of old of one worm per plant,
coli, cauli- yellow spots on each side. repeat every 5 to 7 days as
flower, and needed.
other crucifers
Mexican Bean Adults are hemispherical Insecticide applications
Beetle: in shape and yellowish- are recommended if more
Bean crops brown in color. They have than 30% defoliation takes
black spots on the wing place.
covers. The larvae are
less then 1/2" long and
have many spines.
Spider Mites: Damage is more noticeable Mites tend to be a dry
Over 180 host than the mites themselves; weather problem. Treat
plants including look for yellow stippled with a miticide if
many weeds, soy- leaves that often take on dry conditions are
beans and other a sand-blasted appearance. expected to continue.
beans tend to be Shake the leaves over a
hard hit piece of paper and look
for small pale mites
crawling around.
Stink Bug: Barrel shaped eggs are Removing weedy growth that
Many crops but laid on the undersides of harbors stink bugs will cut
in particular leaves; nymphs are black down on native breeding
pepper and and white or red or green. sites. Spot treatments of
tomato Adults are green or tan. insecticides when stink
All stages have piercing- bugs are seen is recom-
sucking mouth parts. mended.
Damage to pepper and
tomato appears as white
halos and deformations
on the fruits.
Squash Bug: Nymphs are grayish white Handpicking works well
All cucurbits; with dark heads and appen- in small gardens. Chem-
squash bugs pre- dages. Adults are oval ical control might be
fer squash, elongate, light gray, and needed in larger
pumpkin, cucum- mottled yellow on the operations.
ber, and melon underside. Nymphs tend
in that order to be found on the basal
portions of the vine.
Squash Vine Plants suddenly wilt and die; Borers can be cut
Borer: the plants on close exam- out with a sharp knife in
Primarily squash ination have white grub- small plantings; heavily
and pumpkin, but like caterpillars boring infested plants should be
other cucurbits into the basal portions of pulled out. Large plan-
are occasionally the vine. tings may need insecticide
fed upon applications made at the
base of the plants.
Thrips: Small slender yellow This insect tends to be a
Wide range of insects feeding on the problem during dry weather
field crops, flowers and foliage. Damaged and insecticides are
vegetable crops, foliage tends to be spotted only recommended if dry
and floral crops with white when heavily fed conditions are expected
upon and damaged flowers to continue with no rain
are brown and tend not to showers.
to open.
Western Corn Pale cream colored larvae Control for adult silk
Rootworm: tunnel and feed on the clipping is justified if
Corn (only) roots. The more conspicuous there are an average of 5
adults feed on the silks or more beetles per plant
during July and August. and the silk clipping
The adults are pale green is observed before 75%
with three black stripes of the plants have
on their wing covers, silked. To determine the
sometimes the black stripes need for a soil insecticide
are fused together to make next year, examine 40
the wing covers appear random plants from through-
solid black. out the field and count the
total number of beetles on
the entire plant. If the
average number of beetles
exceeds 1 per plant then
you may want to consider
using planting time soil
insecticides or rotating to
another crop.
Whitefly: Small dusty white flies Insecticidal control is
Many vegetable found in the underside of recommended for large pop-
crops, but the leaves. Pale nymphs ulations. This is a very
tomatoes tend to are also found on the under- difficult insect to
be hard hit. sides of the leaves. control.
Their feeding causes the
leaves to become mottled
with yellow.
FRUIT INSECTS
Codling Moth: Pinkish-white caterpillars If using pheromone traps,
Apple and pear enter fruit at calyx end treat if you exceed 5/trap/
primarily, but and tunnel all the way week.
cherries,peaches, to the core. Adult moths
plums, apricots, are grayish-brown with
and similar irregular golden brown lines
fruits are also on the fore wings. 1/2-3/4"
attacked. wingspan.
European Red Mites are very small and This mite is resistant to
Mite: Apple range from red to green. many miticides, so make
pear, plum, Foliage turns a sickly sure that the chemical you
prune, and bronze color as if covered will use is effective. A
many other with dust. dormant oil applied at the
trees and shrubs 1/2" green leaf stage or
earlier in the spring is
important also.
Lesser Peach- Look for brown pupal cases Treat immediately post-
Tree Borer: protruding from wounds on harvest.
Peach, plum, scaffold limbs.
cherry, nectarine,
apricot
Peach Tree Look for a mass of gum Adults emerge July-
Borer: Peach, and frass at the base of September, treat immediately
plum, cherry, the trunk; white larvae post-harvest.
nectarine, will be found under the
apricot bark from 3" below the
soil level to 10" above.
San Jose Scale: Scales are dirty gray Treat early August in
Apple, pear, with a dark concentric severe cases, otherwise
cherry, and many ring on the center. wait until spring. See
other fruit trees Scales infest the bran- PMG for timing.
ches, twigs, and fruit.
Spotted Tentiform Young mines are serpentine Treat young mines with
Leafminer: changing to oval. As the Vydate or Lannate if more
Apple larvae get older they than 3 mines per leaf.
form the leaf into a tent-
like structure.
Variegated Leaf- Eggs are laid in masses in Treat when egg masses are
roller and which the eggs overlap about to hatch (dark head
Tufted Apple much like fish scales. stage).
Budworm: The egg masses are found
Both are general on the leaves.
feeders but are
pests on apple
and peach
White Apple Look for small, pale, Check several trees and
Leafhopper: leafhoppers on the under- treat if a high density is
Apple sides of the leaves. This found on all trees. This
will be the second pest may be bad in regions
generation. with dry weather.
ORNAMENTAL INSECTS
Bagworm: Caterpillars form "bags" Pick off and destroy all
Conifers, maples around their bodies made of bagworms now and/or treat
sycamores, box- silk and plant debris. with an insecticide in mid-
elder, and many They overwinter as eggs June. Early next spring
others in the bags; the eggs pick off all bags you can
hatch in late May and find.
early June.
Euonymus Scale: Females are dark brown Treat May 10 and 20,
Euonymus, oyster-shaped, males are and Aug. 5-15.
bittersweet, and elongate and white.
some ivy ground Crawler stage is May 5-
covers. June 10; and Aug. 1-25
Fall Webworm: Eggs are laid in a mass Nests can be pruned out in
Most fruit and of 200 to 500 often cover- early summer or if a large
nut trees as ed with a woolly layer of numbers of nests exist,
well as some scales. Large groups of treat mid- to late-June or
hardwoods and larvae form a nest at the when new larvae appear.
shrubs tip of a branch. Nests are still apparent
this time of year but
control is not warranted
for full grown larvae
because they have finished
feeding.
Japanese Scale: Long and narrow scale, Treat at 2-week intervals
Maple, privet dull white in color, from June 1-Sept. 1.
often found on the
trunks and branches.
Juniper Webworm: Webs will usually be Prune off and destroy any
Juniper and formed on on the upper active webs. Insecticide
red cedar branches and will include controls, if needed, should
frass and dead needles. be applied late July-early
August.
Mimosa Webworm: Larvae feed gregariously Treat when trees show
Mimosa and in a web spun over the first signs of feeding in
honeylocust flowers and leaves and June. May need to repeat in
later feed individually mid-July and mid-August.
on leaves and pods.
Obscure Scale: Scales are circular, Treat white oak in mid
Oak, pecan, elm grayish, and closely August. Treat red oaks and
hickory, hack- resemble tree bark. They other trees in mid July.
berry can usually be found on
twigs and branches. Small
branches may be killed.
Pine Bark Aphid: Look for cottony masses Treat late-June and
Principally on on the bark and branches mid-August. Make sure the
white pine but covering small, aphid-like, insecticide is applied with
on other pines pale-green insects. strong stream that pen-
as well etrates the "cotton". Small
populations can be
dislodged with a strong
stream of water alone.
San Jose Scale: Scales are dirty gray Treat late July-early
Many trees and with a dark concentric August.
and shrubs ring on the center.
Scales infest the bran-
ches, twigs, and fruit.
Spruce Mite: Small mites, 1/50" long, Spray with a miticide
Arborvitae, cause a yellow stippling early fall.
spruce, juniper, on the needles and die-
hemlock back of lower branches.
Yellow Poplar Small black weevils make Many yellow poplars will
Weevil/ Sas- rice shaped holes on have leaves turn yellow and
safras Weevil: the underside of the leaves. brown prematurely; this is
Yellow poplar, Larvae make blotch type from damage that occurred
sassafras, mines on the same leaves earlier this year.
magnolia the adults fed upon. It is too late for control
This pest has not been this year.
as bad this year as it
was in 1987 but some trees
have had leaves turn brown.
White Peach The female scale is white Treat July 5-15, and
Scale: Most with a yellow mark on the September 1-10. Next year
fruit trees and center and has a rounded treat also May 1 and May
many ornamentals shape. The male is solid 10.
white and elongated in
shape. Crawler stage is
April 25-May 15, and July
1-15, and August 20-September 15.
* See Virginia Pest Management Guides for recommendations on insecticides and rates. Use insecticide applications only when high population levels demand control action. Most plants can support small populations of pest insects.
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