Insect Update: Three Insect Pests to Consider
Figure 1. Alfalfa weevil damage and a large larva. Photo by Adriana Murillo-Williams, Penn State Extension
As the growing season gains momentum, insect challenges are bubbling up around Pennsylvania, and I encourage growers to scout their crops for pest activity to assess its potential impact. I will touch upon alfalfa weevil, black cutworms, and cereal leaf beetle.
First, damage from alfalfa weevil is evident in some alfalfa fields, but tends to be patchy. Alfalfa weevil has only one generation per year and is usually only a pest of the first cutting of alfalfa, unless you live in cooler climates to the west and north, where second cutting can be damaged. To scout your fields, assess the number of weevil larvae on 30 plants from across the field. Weevil larvae are green with a white stripe down their back (Figure 2). If populations exceed economic threshold, which can be found on our fact sheet, consider cutting the crop or applying an insecticide. If you cut because the damage was heavy, you should scout the stubble to assess the risk of damage to the regrowth. If you see two or more larvae per crown, then spraying the stubble will likely be warranted. If you treat for alfalfa weevil, it is unlikely that the insecticide will have any benefit for controlling potato leafhopper, which usually arrives in early June.

Second, black cutworm moths have been arriving in Pennsylvania for a few weeks, but our Black Cutworm Moth Trapping Network has yet to detect any "significant flights," which would indicate an increased risk of cutting damage from caterpillars. Should we detect significant flights in the coming weeks, we will track growing degree days for those sites to keep people apprised of the risk for cutting damage.
So far, it appears that the risk of damage from black cutworm is not elevated, but we will see as the season progresses. Damage from young caterpillars looks like a line of holes across the leaves (Figure 3). Older caterpillars cut plants off at the base and take the plant to an underground burrow to consume the plant. If you find 2, 3, 5, and 7 caterpillar-cut plants per 100 seedling-, V2-, V3-, and V4-stage plants, respectively, your field will likely benefit from an insecticide application. Keep in mind, however, that if cutting damage is only evident in a portion of the field, you can restrict your insecticide application to that area. Also, remember that preventative spraying is often useless against black cutworm caterpillars because the window of activity of the insecticide often misses the active period of caterpillars. Continue to scout until plants reach V5, when they are rarely troubled by black cutworm. See our fact sheet for more details.

Lastly, this is the time of year that cereal leaf beetle larvae are active in small grain fields (wheat, oats, barley, and rye can be infested). Cereal leaf beetle larvae are easily identified because the larvae look slimy and shiny due to their practice of piling their frass, the word for insect feces, on their backs (Figure 4). Infestations are difficult to predict and can be very patchy, with some fields heavily infested, while others nearby have almost none. Scouting is the key to identifying infestations and populations that are large enough to be managed. If you scout fields and find populations that exceed the economic threshold (one larvae per flag leaf), then using an insecticide is likely to be profitable. If you do not have populations, then an insecticide application is unlikely to be helpful, may do more harm than good by suppressing beneficial insect populations, and you are likely wasting money on a product that you do not need. Similarly, I would strongly recommend avoiding the practice of adding an insecticide to a tank mix simply because a sprayer is making a pass across the field; unless economically damaging populations of insects are present, there is no point. A Penn State fact sheet provides more details on their lifecycle and some images of adults, larvae, and their damage.











