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Insect Pest Management • Insects – 1.5 - 30 million species – Most Insects are not pests “For 150 million years, insects have served as the sexual handmaidens to the flowering plants. Most plants on earth cannot reproduce without them. When the bugs fly from flower to flower for the nectar, some of the pollen is transferred from stigma to stigma. Wham bam, thank you, ma’am.” -Rowan Jacobsen, Fruitless Fall Classification • • • • • • • Kingdom > Animal Phylum > Arthropoda (one of 33 Phyla) Class > e.g. Insecta, Arachnida Order > e.g. Coleoptera, Diptera Family Genus Species 1.5 – 30 million ARTHROPODS • Legs with joints • Segmented Bodies • Members of that Group – – – – – – – – Insects Crustaceans Mites Ticks Spiders Millipedes Centipedes Symphylans CLASS INSECTA (HEXAPODA) • Adults have 6 legs • 3 body segments, – Head, thorax and abdomen • • • • One pair of antennae Some have wings Spineless = invertebrate Exoskeleton MOST IMPORTANT FEATURES OF INSECT PESTS • MOUTHPARTS: – Piercing/sucking – Chewing – Sponging – Siphoning arthursclipart.org Mouthparts: Chewing Beetles (Coleoptera) Caterpillars (Lepidoptera) Grasshoppers (Orthoptera) Termites (Isoptera) Mouthparts: Rasping –Sucking (e.g Thrips) Piercing- Sucking (e.g. Mosquito) Sponging Mouthparts (e.g. Housefly) Siphoning Chewing – Lapping (e.g. Honey Bee) METAMORPHOSIS • INSECTS CHANGE FORM AS THEY DEVELOP • FOUR TYPES OF METAMORPHOSIS – None – Complete – Incomplete – Gradual No Metamorphosis Egg • • • • Juvenile Adult Body size & proportions change Some times segments may be added; No wings Same habitat – Complete Metamorphosis Egg Larvae Pupa Adult • Immatures rarely resemble adults • Wing development begins internally • Different habitats Southwest Corn Borer Incomplete Metamorphosis Egg Naiads Adult • Immatures may or may not resemble adults • Immatures in water • No pupal stage • Different habitats Gradual metamorphosis Egg Nymphs • Similar in appearance • Wing pads in later immature stages • Same habitats Adult Gradual metamorphosis similar to simple, except most of these insects will develop wings. OTHER ARTHROPODS • ARACHNIDS – Spiders, mites, ticks SPIDERS • USUALLY CONSIDERED BENEFICIAL • Few poisonous • Eat other insects (beneficials, too) • GENERAL FEEDERS MITES • FOLIAGE FEEDERS – Spider mites, spruce mites • BUD FEEDERS – Cyclamen mites, Eriophyoid mites – only mites known to transmit viruses (gall mites) • BULB MITES • PREDATOR MITES Eriophyid mites Predator mites Many mites are predator mites – feed on pest mites. Commercially available and good biological control agents! CRUSTACEANS • Sow bugs, pill bugs – Same class as crabs, lobster CENTIPEDES • Predators that feed on insects and spiders • One pair of legs per segment • 15 or more pairs of legs MILLIPEDES • FEED ON DECAYING PLANT MATTER AND SOMETIMES PLANT ROOTS • 2 PAIRS OF LEGS PER SEGMENT • 30 OR MORE PAIRS OF LEGS SYMPHYLANS • SOIL DWELLING PESTS • FEED ON GERMINATING SEEDS, ROOTS AND BULBS • WHITE WITH NUMEROUS LEGS AND PROMINENT ANTENNAE • Adults = 12 pairs of legs • Biology and Control: • http://insects.ippc.orst.edu/ pnw/insects?30IPMW02.dat BENEFICIAL ARTHROPODS • • • • • Products – Silk, dyes Food source Improved soil structure Scavengers Predators and parasites of other pests BENEFICIALS • PREDATORS – Directly catch and feed on prey • PARASITES – Use other insects to incubate eggs and feed larvae INSECT PESTS • INSECTS CAUSE DAMAGE TO PLANTS IN MANY WAYS – Fruit and seed destruction – Tissue damage and vigor reduction – Disease transmission – Aesthetics – Public nuisance (honeydew) How to tell if you have a pest • SYMPTOMS – What the host shows or exhibits • Tissue damage • Root damage • Distortion • Discoloration • Dieback Boll weevil, kidsbrittanica.com How to tell if you have a pest • SIGNS - What the pest leaves for you to find • Frass: debris the insect leaves, shed skin from molting, feces, webbing • Pest or eggs, froth, honeydew, sawdust Amateur Entomologists’ Society amentsoc.org Grubs Grubs (Order: Coleoptera) • Weevil larva • Larva feed on roots – Adults also feed on foliage and seed • Adult mouthparts are curved into a downward curving snout – Characteristic semi-circular notching on the leaves • Serious pests of ornamental plants Grubs Other Root Feeders • Crane fly larva - Order: Diptera • Wireworms - Order: Coleoptera • Fungus gnat larva - Order: Diptera Fungus Gnat Wood Borers (Order: Coleoptera) • Larva have well developed chewing mouthparts and can reach great size • Larva bore into woody trunks and twigs – Branches can be girdled and dieback • Eggs laid in wounds of woody plants Wood Borers Leaf Miners • Can be moth, beetle or fly larva • Orders: Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera • Cause damage on ornamental evergreens • Damage to edible leafy crops and flowers Vegetable Leaf Miner Birch Leaf Miner Bark Beetles (Order: Coleoptera) • Cause leaf damage, tunnel under bark • Serious vectors of fungal diseases – Example: Dutch Elm Disease Bark Beetle Bark Beetle Sucking Insects (Order: Homoptera) • Example: Aphids, Leafhoppers and Scale • Piercing-sucking mouthparts • Feeding damage, causing distortion and weakening plants • Can spread plant viruses Aphids Aphids Aphids Rasping-sucking pests (Order: Thrysanoptera) • Thrips – Directly damage plants by cuticle destruction and feeding damage – Vectors of plant viruses Rasping-sucking pests (Order: Acarina) • Spider mites – Feeding damage – Eriophyid mites, vector diseases (viruses) Gall forming insects • Spruce Adelgids – Homoptera • Honey locust pod gall midge – Diptera • Bladder gall mites on Maple – Acarina • Oak leaf galls, wasp – Hymenoptera Gall forming insects Gall forming insects Tent Caterpillars - Order: Lepidoptera • Leaf skeletonizers • Leaf rollers Caterpillars Twig Girdlers (Order: Coleoptera) • Borers, weevils, – Cause dieback of twigs, shoots Leaf damaging insects • • • • • • Many orders, adults and larva Chewing, reduce foliage Sucking and rasping damage Reduce plant vigor Ruin aesthetics Can lead to disease infections • Entomology for Master Gardeners • http://pest.ca.uky.edu/EXT/master_g ardener/entbasics/mouthparts/mout hparts.shtml