Bermudagrass Stem Maggot
The Bermudagrass Stem Maggot (BGSM) has been with us for several years now and I am sure everyone knows how to identify and treat it.
Even so, I have seen a lot of BGSM damage this year. Up until now we had so much rain that the grass was outgrowing the damage, and it was a little hard to see. If you have noticed small patches or even individual plants that are turning yellow and dying in your Bermudagrass fields, then there is a very good chance you have an infestation of the BGSM.
BGSM damage looks much like frost damage on your Bermuda. The tips will turn brown and look like they have had a light frost.
On infected plants, if you pull the top leaf or two it will slip out very easily, and you can see the damage at the base of these leaves on the stems.
This damage is a result of the Bermuda Stem maggot fly laying eggs on the bottom side of the leaf. Once hatched, the maggot will go to the node, burrow itself inside the stem and feed on the vascular tissue, causing death to the top one to three leaves. With things beginning to dry up, the damage will become a little more apparent and I expect the BGSM to start really showing up in irrigated fields and those fields that are still lush and growing.
Forage is plentiful this year and treatment may not be a cost you want to incur, but if hay yields are important to you, yield reductions can exceed 50%.
With this much potential loss, treatment certainly is feasible depending on the stage of growth of your grass and the intensity of the infestation. However, due to the insect having multiple generations during a growing period, control can be difficult. If you start seeing damage and your hay is close to ready to cut, go ahead and cut it, then you can begin treatment following cutting. The recommended treatment consists of two separate applications of a pyrethroid like lambda-cyhalothrin insecticide.
The first application should be made 7 days following hay harvest. The second application should be made one to two weeks following the first application.
If you have had high enough numbers to merit treatment, then this double treatment with a pyrethroid should also take care of any armyworm or grasshopper threats. If your field has no history of the stem maggot then do not treat for BGSM.
Fields that are grazed are rarely affected by BGSM; this is because the cattle tend to keep the young tender leaves grazed off, leaving the BGSM fly nowhere to lay her eggs. One interesting bit of information about the BGSM is that it prefers finer stemmed bermudagrasses over those that are more course stemmed. Bermudagrasses like Coastal, Common, or Alicia will have a higher incidence of infection than Tifton-85. They are especially attracted to common Bermuda. To see if your treatments are working just check the common patches you may have in or around your fields.
Next week we will talk about the much more devastating new pest the Pasture Mealybug.