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What bug did it and where did it go?

Dr. Charles R. Ward, Extension/Research Entomologist

New Mexico State University

Diagnosing Plant Problems caused by Insects = Symptomology

Categories:

  1. Chewed or Tattered Foliage or Blossoms.
  2. Stippled, yellowed, bleached or bronzed foliage
  3. Distortion of Plant parts
  4. Dieback of plant parts.
  5. Presence of insect or insect-related products.

Category 1 Symptoms

Chewed or Tattered foliage or blossoms

Symptoms of an insect or insect relative with biting-chewing mouthparts such as:

  • snails and slugs
  • grasshoppers
  • larvae of, and sometimes adult, beetles
  • larvae of moths or butterflies
  • sawfly larvae

Category 2 Symptoms

Stippled, yellowed, bleached, or bronzed foliage

Symptoms of an insect or insect relative with sucking (not biting-chewing) mouthparts such as 

  • spider mites
  • thrips
  • plant bugs
  • aphids
  • psyllids
  • lace bugs
  • leafhoppers
  • whitefly

Category 3 Symptoms

Distortion of plant parts

Symptoms of an insect or insect relative with sucking (not biting-chewing) mouth parts whose feeding and injection of salivary fluids cause distortion of plant parts such as:

  • eriophyid gall (blister, bud or rust) mites
  • thrips, 
  • aphids
  • psyllids
  • cynipid (gall) wasps

 

Category 4 Symptoms

Dieback of plant parts

Leaf, twig or branch dieback, or in a few cases, cause death of the entire plant, such as : 

  • scale insects, 
  • moth or beetle larvae that bore
  • cynipid (gall ) wasps

Category 5 Symptoms

Presence of insect or insect-related products

The most commonly seen products, and the pests responsible for them are:

  • Honeydew and sooty mold 
  •     Aphids, soft scales. leafhoppers, mealybugs, psyllids, and whiteflies
  • Dark fecal specks: 
  •    Greenhouse thrips and plant bugs.
  • Tents, webs, and silken mats:
  •     Tent caterpillars, webworms, and leaf rollers
  • Spittle: 
  •     Spittlebugs
  • Cast skins,
  •      Aphids, leafhoppers, and lace bugs
  • Pitch masses:
  •     Larvae of certain moths, such as bark and pitch moths and pinyon pitch nodule moth
  • Pitch tubes:
  •     Certain scolytid bark beetles, such as the Dendroctonus sp.
  • Flocculence (cottony waxy material):
  •     Adelgids,. mealybugs, certain scales, and aphids.
  • Slime:
  •     Snails, slugs, and certain Hymenoptera such as the pear or cherry slug.

Example Multiple symptom categories

Aphids

Category 2. Leaf yellowing

Category 3. Plant distortion

  • leaf cupping, galls

Category 5. Insect products: 

  • Honeydew, sooty mold
  • Cast skins
  • Flocculence

When should control action be taken?

Economic threshold:

    When damage levels are greater than control costs 
($$)

Aesthetic threshold:

     When damage levels are unacceptable or intolerable (looks)

    Factors affecting the aesthetic threshold:

    Location of the plant in the landscape (visibility)

  • Back yard
  •     Higher numbers - more damage tolerated
  • Front yard
  •     Lower numbers - less damage tolerated

    Species of pest involved

  • aphids -high numbers generally tolerated
  • scales -moderate numbers tolerated
  • bark beetles -use preventive measures

    Whether pest is increasing or decreasing

  • increasing-more damage will occur
  • decreasing-most damage already occurred

    Time of year the pest appears (especially for foliage pest)

  • spring -much time for severe damage to occur
  • summer -less time for severe damage to occur
  • fall- little time for severe damage to occur

    Time delay for strategy to be effective

  • slow - lower action threshold
  • moderate - moderate action threshold
  • rapid - higher action threshold

 

02/01/2009

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