| Missouri Environment and Garden |
Volume 9, No. 8 |
| News for Missouri’s Gardens, Yards and
Resources |
August 2003 |
Summer Pests in the Garden
This summer has been a busy year for insects in the garden. Many of
the insects we are seeing in high numbers are attacking the garden
earlier in the season than is typical. We have also seen an
increase in Japanese beetles in the state, a newly introduced pest
for Missouri.
Japanese beetles have recently been found in urban areas in Missouri
and can be quite destructive to lawns, trees, flowers and fruits.
(See the article on page 54). The adult beetle is about ½ inch long
and is metallic green and bronze with a row of white tufts of hair
on each side of its body. Japanese beetles resemble green June
beetles but are about 1/3 the size of green June beetles. Adult
beetles are spotted in the garden from mid-July through August.
They are especially fond of roses, grapes and flowers of all kinds.
The larval stage is a typical white grub and feeds on the roots of
grasses and primarily damages turf. If you find beetles that
resemble Japanese beetles, please contact our office for assistance
in identification as this insect is a quarantined pest in Missouri.
Another beetle that wreak havoc in home gardens is the blister
beetle. Blister beetles range from ½ to 1 inch in length and are
easily recognized by their characteristic shape: narrow and
cylindrical with a distinct "neck-like" appearance when viewed from
above. Their colors range from black to gray to brown, and some
species have orange stripes. Blister beetles appear in late June
and early July and feed on the leaves and flowers of most plants.
They can cause serious damage, and in my garden they completely
defoliate my buttercups on an annual basis. Blister beetles also
produce cantharidin, a protective toxic chemical, which is released
when they are disturbed or crushed. This chemical can cause
blistering of the skin, especially tender skin. Blister beetles are
also highly toxic to some livestock, including horses, which
sometimes eat them in alfalfa hay. Blister beetles usually travel
in groups and tend to mass in one area of the garden. Blister
beetles come into the garden quickly, feed heavily, and disappear
quite abruptly. They tend to feed on the same plants from year to
year; thus, you can protect your plants using row covers or shade
cloth. Also, blister beetles are usually controlled easily with
several garden insecticides.
And for those of you wondering what happened to your hollyhock
leaves? Hollyhock was attacked heavily this year by a leafmining
insect that primarily attacks hollyhock, and, occasionally,
hibiscus. Leafminers are the larval stage of various insects, that
upon hatching from the egg, tunnel into the leaves between the upper
and lower surfaces to feed on the inner part of the leaves.
Sometimes, these insects will skeltonize the leaves until nothing is
left such as was the case with hollyhocks this year. Other plants
commonly attacked by various species of leafminers include
columbine, larkspur, nasturtium, verbena and chrysanthemum.

The Blister Beetle can cause blistering of the skin and are highly toxic to some livestock |
Mary Kroening, Missouri Master Gardener Coordinator and UMC Horticulturalist, (573) 882-9633
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