The squash vine borer tunnels in the vines of pumpkins and
summer and winter squash; it rarely is found in cucumbers or melons and cannot
complete its development except in squash or pumpkins.
Identification. The
squash vine borer adult is a black and reddish moth called a clearwing moth
because large portions of its hind wings lack scales. These moths are ¾-
to 1-inch long, with a 1- to 1 ½-inch wing span. They are active during
the daytime and superficially resemble wasps as they fly about. Larvae
are yellowish-white with a brown head, 3 pairs of thoracic legs, and 5 pairs of
fleshy abdominal prolegs that bear tiny hooks called crochets.
Fully-grown larvae are about 1 inch long. Brownish pupae are slightly
less than 1 inch long, and they are found in the soil inside a dark, silken
cocoon.
Life
Cycle. Squash vine borers overwinter as mature larvae
or pupae within cocoons 1 ½ to 3 inches below the soil surface. Moths
emerge and begin to mate and lay eggs in June and July in much of the Midwest
(earlier, beginning in May, in southern Illinois and similar latitudes).
Moths lay eggs singly at the base of plants or on stems and petioles, beginning
when plants start to bloom or "run". Larvae feed within stems
or petioles for 2 to 4 weeks, leaving brown, sawdust-like frass (droppings) at
holes where they entered the stem. In southern Illinois these pupate and
produce a second flight of moths in late summer; in the north, larvae or pupae
of the first (and only) generation remain in the soil through the winter.
Plant
Injury. Tunneling within vines destroys water- and food-conducting
tissues, reducing plant vigor and yield and sometimes killing vines.
Management. Disking or plowing to destroy vines soon after
harvest and bury or destroy overwintering cocoons reduces moth populations
within a field in the spring. Staggering plantings over several dates
also allows some plantings to escape heaviest periods of egg-laying.
Early detection of moths and initial damage is essential for timing insecticide
applications. For insecticides to be effective, they must be applied
before larvae enter stems or petioles. Scout for moths (pheromone lures
and traps are available for monitoring flight periods but are not consistently
effective for detecting moth flight) and look for entrance holes and frass as
soon as plants begin to bloom or vine. Apply insecticides beginning 5 to7
days after moths are first detected and at weekly intervals for 3 to 5 weeks,
or begin when injury is first noted and make a second application a week
later. See the 2014 Midwest Vegetable Production Guide for Commercial Growers for listings of registered
insecticides.
(from Illinois
Fruit and Vegetable News, Vol 20 No 7)
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