Title: Turf Insect Pest
1Turf Insect Pest
2Introduction
- Turfgrass value functional, aesthetic, and
economic - All values adversely affected by pest
- Over 300 million acres of turf in the US
- 81 percent in more than 50 million lawns
- 19 percent in parks, golf courses, athletic
fields, cemeteries, sod farms, roadsides, other
sites - Turfgrass culture a 25 plus billion dollar per
year industry in the US
3Introduction
- 500,000 plus people make their living directly
from the establishment and maintenance of turf - 25 to 30 million households use pesticides at
least once yearly on lawns to control insect
pests _at_ cost gt 1 billion dollars
4Driving Factors in Turfgrass Pest Management
- Increasing demand for high quality turf
- Increasing public concern about potential risks
to human health and environment
5Diagnosis and Sampling of Insect Pests
- Damage caused by insects can often be confused
with diseases, drought, or pesticide injury - Therefore, proper diagnosis is the first step in
any successful control program
6Diagnosis and Sampling of Insect Pests
- Specific pest identification (start with
suspects) - Sampling (based on suspected causes of damage)
7Diagnosis Guided by the Use of the Knowledge
Regarding
- Type of damage
- Location of habitat
- Season of occurrence
- Other clues
8General Indications of Potential or Actual Insect
Pest Problems
- Surface Feeding
- Large numbers of birds feeding on turf area
- Small moths flying zigzag patterns over the turf
surface, especially in late evening - Rapid loss of green color similar to fertilizer
burn or drought injury, even though the area is
adequately irrigated - Frass at or near the soil surface
9General Indications of Potential or Actual Insect
Pest Problems
- Subsurface feeding
- Loose turf surface indicated by poor footing or
excessive traffic injury - Damage to turf by insect feeding mammals (moles,
skunks, and raccoons) - Overall thinning of turf
- Chlorotic areas/ patches of browning turf
10Three Major Habitat areas for Insects in Turf
- Leaves and stems
- Thatch
- Soil
11Insect Pest in/on Leaves and Stems
- Most easily controlled because treatments may be
applied directly timing of application is the
most important criterion - Detected by careful examination of stems, leaf
sheath and leaves (May require magnification) - Bermudagrass mite
- Winter grain mite
- Rhodesgrass mealybug
- Greenbug
- Fruit fly
12Insect Pest in Thatch
- Thick thatch (grater than ½ inch) attracts
chinch bugs and others. May impede penetration of
pesticides into the soil - Chinch bugs
- Sod webworms
- Cutworms
- Armyworms
- Fiery skipper
13Insect Pest in ThatchDetection
- Flotation primarily to determine the presence or
absence of chinch bugs - Detergent flushes for caterpillars, weevils, mole
crickets and other insects - With either of these techniques, it is important
to sample at the edges of heavily damaged areas
since the highest insect populations are often
located here rather than in areas already
exhibiting severe damage
14Insect Pest in the Soil
- Much more restricted in movement
- Mole crickets
- Ground pearls
- White grubs
- Billbugs
- European cranefly
- Primary sampling by examination of the root zone
and the soil and sod - Soap flushes work well for mole crickets
15Types of Damage
- Chewing insects most common type among turfgrass
insects - They have strong mandibles which bite or sever
tissues - Damage symptoms exhibit physical removal of plant
tissues - Stripping away of the epidermis of leaves
- Notching of leaves and stems
- Complete severing of plant parts
16Types of DamageChewing Insects Cont.
- Hollowing out of stems and crowns
- Pruning of roots
- Most chewing insects of turf are immature forms
(larvae and nymphs) but a few adults are also
included - Common chewing pest White grubs, armyworms, mole
crickets, sod webworms
17Types of DamageSucking Insects
- Sucking insects pierce and suck plant tissue with
modified mouthparts that form a beak which
surrounds needle-like mandibles and maxillae - Salivary secretions (sometimes toxic to the
plant) are pumped into the plant to aid in
sucking up plant sap and cell contents - Plants injured by this method of feeding
generally remain completely intact
18Types of DamageSucking Insects Cont.
- The entire plant starts to deteriorate because of
the loss of plant sap or in the response to the
injection of toxic salivary secretions - Early symptoms Yellowing, wilting, blasting of
leaves, necrosis, followed by browning and death
of plant - Both adults and nymphs of piercing sucking
insects damage turf - Common insects in this group include chinch bugs,
greenbugs, and ground pearls
19Seasonal Occurrence
- Differences in seasonal occurrence of insects and
damage provides diagnostic clue - Winter only the winter grain mite causes damage
during winter - Spring European crane fly, mole crickets in warm
humid regions, and the single generation
scarabaeids may cause damage in the spring - Summer everything else (for example multiple
generations of scarabaeids) - Fall Mole crickets and white grubs
20Value of early Detection
- Early symptoms frequently evident before the
actual pest is observed - Damage can progress rapidly when large numbers of
insects are present - Some insects easier to control in early stage of
development
21Early Symptoms
- First symptom of damage caused by leaf and
stem-feeding insects is yellowing of leaves in
small isolated patches - Root feeders cause a gradual thinning of the turf
- Positive attribution of symptoms to a pest
requires determination that the pest is present
in a damaging stage - Dead or brown turf may no longer be harboring the
pest responsible - Proper identification is important for proper
treatment and prevention
22Insect Control Strategies for TurfCultural
Control
- Host plant resistance
- The underling susceptibility or suitability or
the lack thereof principle method of
controlexhibits constant pressure of each pest
generationimmunity is the ultimate level but
rarely obtainableexhibition of various degrees
of resistance or susceptibility to best - Endophytes sometimes contribute to resistance
23Insect Control Strategies for TurfCultural
Control
- Turf Vigor
- Vigorous, steadily growing stands can deter
permanent turf damage - Rapidly growing rhizomes and stolons quickly fill
in small localized dead patches - High nitrogen fertilizer can help recover a
generally thinned stand
24Insect Control Strategies for TurfCultural
Control
- Soil Moisture
- In high temperature and moisture stress, two
groups of insects, chinch bugs and sod webworms,
do most of their damage, with the grass going
into dormancy, making damage difficult to detect - When adequate moisture is present, symptoms of
damage are easier to detect in the form of yellow
leaves and small brown patches
25Insect Control Strategies for TurfCultural
Control
- Thatch Management
- Affects some insects directly (chinch bugs), also
affects the efficacy of insecticide applications - Many organic insecticides adsorb to organic
matter - Dursban is very readily bound to thatch
- Many registered pesticides are broken down
readily in UV light, and so they must penetrate
quickly to do their job
26Insect Control Strategies for TurfBiological
Control
- Predators, parasites, and pathogens that attack
pest species. Predators include other insects and
sometimes vertebrates - Advantages of natural controls include their
safety, relative permanence, and relative
economy, although all of these dont apply in all
cases
27Insect Control Strategies for TurfBiological
Control
- Predators
- Free-living organisms that consume a prey
relatively non-specific such as - Ground beetles, spiders, some ants, big-eyed
bugs, phytoseiid mites and staphalinids common
28Insect Control Strategies for TurfBiological
Control
- Parasitoids
- Insects that have a parasite-like relationship to
their host, resulting in host death, develop
inside host quite host-specific, include a
number of Hymenoptera and Diptera
29Insect Control Strategies for TurfBiological
Control
- Pathogens
- Fungi, viruses, and bacterial organisms, with
some nematodes and protozoans host specific,
potentially self-sustaining, depend heavily on
environmental conditions to work - milky disease (bacterial disease of Japanese
beetle grubs) - B. thuringiensis, a commercially used pathogen of
lepidoptera and others - Nematodes , commercially inoculated with a
bacterial pathogen, used against a number of
soil-dwelling turf pests
30Insect Control Strategies for TurfChemical
Controls
- Pesticides (see current state recommendations)
- Important to follow label directions accurately
- Adherence to legal requirements may be necessary
- Most must be watered in after application