On Jul 20, 5:23 pm, Amos Nomore wrote:
In article . com,
" wrote:
Over the last few days I noticed a lot of chewed-up leaves on the
ground beneath our large 25 foot tree. Upon closer examination I
found the following larvae attached to the leaves, as well as some fly-
looking creatures (not sure if they're related to the larvae).
Can anyone identify the offending vermin? Should I be concerned about
this? What steps should I take to get rid of the infestation and save
the tree?
Pics at the following address:
http://picasaweb.google.com/jseemann/InfectedTree
Is that a linden tree?
The procreating insects are Japanese beetles, which appear to be
skeletonizing the leaves.
The "larvae" on the leaves are spindle galls which are probably caused
by a particular mite or midge.
There is tons of information concerning the control of Japanese beetles
and leaf galls on the web. I am not at all sure what the best methods
are. Maybe someone here will chime in.
Yes that does indeed look like a Japanese Beetle! Also my tree does
appear to be a Linden as well based on the leaf pattern. Looking in
to some online sources I confirmed that the Japanese Beetle does have
something of a fetish for the Linden tree.
Anyone have any tips for getting rid of the adult Beetle? Online
sources seem to indicate nothing works perfectly...