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bugzgrl 26-01-2006 03:35 PM

lily beetles
 
Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread
of a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet
lily beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black
legs, head and antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red
body. If anyone, particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted
this critter in their garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate
some information: your location (city, state/province, postal/zip
code) and the year that you found it. Feel free to include any tidbits
of info (for example, the species you found it on) that you think might
be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North
American Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some
recent statistics to accompany the talk.
I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis about the lily beetle at Carleton
University in Ottawa, Ontario. If anyone has any sightings to report,
or has any questions regarding the beetle or my work, please contact me
at .
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst


Timothy 26-01-2006 05:32 PM

lily beetles
 
On Thu, 26 Jan 2006 07:35:07 -0800, bugzgrl wrote:

Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread of
a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet lily
beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black legs, head and
antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red body. If anyone,
particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted this critter in their
garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate some information: your
location (city, state/province, postal/zip code) and the year that you
found it. Feel free to include any tidbits of info (for example, the
species you found it on) that you think might be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North American
Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some recent
statistics to accompany the talk. I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis
about the lily beetle at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario. If
anyone has any sightings to report, or has any questions regarding the
beetle or my work, please contact me at .
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst


Good day Crystal, you may want to contact the Entomological Society of
Ontario. Tim Haye of Christian-Albrechts University released a paper on
the biological control of Lilioceris lilii and you may get lucky and get
access to an up to date distribution map. At the very least they should be
able to point you in the right direction.
http://www.entsocont.com/

The University of Rhode Island has done a lot of work on Lilioceris lilii
and they may have a map also. Well worth your time to contact them and see
what they have.

--
http://resources.ywgc.com


Ann 27-01-2006 12:20 AM

lily beetles
 
"bugzgrl" expounded:

Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread
of a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet
lily beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black
legs, head and antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red
body. If anyone, particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted
this critter in their garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate
some information: your location (city, state/province, postal/zip
code) and the year that you found it. Feel free to include any tidbits
of info (for example, the species you found it on) that you think might
be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North
American Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some
recent statistics to accompany the talk.
I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis about the lily beetle at Carleton
University in Ottawa, Ontario. If anyone has any sightings to report,
or has any questions regarding the beetle or my work, please contact me
at .
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst


They've been in my garden since 1996 - but then again, I'm within 20
miles of their origin here in Massachusetts - lucky me :o(
--
Ann, gardening in Zone 6a
South of Boston, Massachusetts
e-mail address is not checked
******************************

Cheryl Isaak 27-01-2006 11:35 AM

lily beetles
 
On 1/26/06 7:20 PM, in article ,
"Ann" wrote:

"bugzgrl" expounded:

Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread
of a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet
lily beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black
legs, head and antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red
body. If anyone, particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted
this critter in their garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate
some information: your location (city, state/province, postal/zip
code) and the year that you found it. Feel free to include any tidbits
of info (for example, the species you found it on) that you think might
be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North
American Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some
recent statistics to accompany the talk.
I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis about the lily beetle at Carleton
University in Ottawa, Ontario. If anyone has any sightings to report,
or has any questions regarding the beetle or my work, please contact me
at
.
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst


They've been in my garden since 1996 - but then again, I'm within 20
miles of their origin here in Massachusetts - lucky me :o(

I think the beetles arrived within in 2 years of that here. Maybe one!

Until there is a better solution then hand picking, I give up on lilies. Not
my daylilies that are, thankfully unaffected, but glory days of scent are
gone her.

Cheryl


Sue Burnham 27-01-2006 11:08 PM

lily beetles
 

"Cheryl Isaak" wrote in message
...
On 1/26/06 7:20 PM, in article ,
"Ann" wrote:

"bugzgrl" expounded:

Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread
of a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet
lily beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black
legs, head and antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red
body. If anyone, particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted
this critter in their garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate
some information: your location (city, state/province, postal/zip
code) and the year that you found it. Feel free to include any tidbits
of info (for example, the species you found it on) that you think might
be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North
American Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some
recent statistics to accompany the talk.
I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis about the lily beetle at Carleton
University in Ottawa, Ontario. If anyone has any sightings to report,
or has any questions regarding the beetle or my work, please contact me
at
.
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst


They've been in my garden since 1996 - but then again, I'm within 20
miles of their origin here in Massachusetts - lucky me :o(

I think the beetles arrived within in 2 years of that here. Maybe one!

Until there is a better solution then hand picking, I give up on lilies.

Not
my daylilies that are, thankfully unaffected, but glory days of scent are
gone her.

Cheryl



I'm with you, Cheryl.

IN 1995 I started a home nursery, and I was having some great fun selling
bunches of flowers along with produce at our Farmers Market. In June and
July of '96 and '97 I was pocketing some good weekend change when the
Lilies were in bloom. One stalk of Rubrums in a mixed bouquet... YEE HAH!
I had "colonies" -- and was adding more.

In 1997 I saw my first Lily Beetle.

The only bulb lilies that live here anymore are some weedy L. tigridium
that I am rouging out, and one L. Superbum that doesn't seem to be the
least attractive to the Lily Beetle.

All the rest are gone, and I'm not replacing them. I miss them dearly.

Sue
Western Maine.



Ann 27-01-2006 11:23 PM

lily beetles
 
Cheryl Isaak expounded:

I think the beetles arrived within in 2 years of that here. Maybe one!

Until there is a better solution then hand picking, I give up on lilies. Not
my daylilies that are, thankfully unaffected, but glory days of scent are
gone her.


Yea, the little bastages ate all of my species lilies I'd collected
over years and years, along with the fritillarias. They're still out
there in the summer munching on whatever stragglers come up. I've
given up lilies completely :o( Hopefully someday they'll come up with
something that really works.
--
Ann, gardening in Zone 6a
South of Boston, Massachusetts
e-mail address is not checked
******************************

Cheryl Isaak 28-01-2006 12:00 AM

lily beetles
 
On 1/27/06 6:08 PM, in article , "Sue
Burnham" wrote:


"Cheryl Isaak" wrote in message
...
On 1/26/06 7:20 PM, in article
,
"Ann" wrote:

"bugzgrl" expounded:

Hello everyone,
I am an entomologist (bug scientist) interesting in tracking the spread
of a nasty ornamental lily pest called the lily leaf beetle (or scarlet
lily beetle). It's a small (5-8mm) bright red beetle with black
legs, head and antennae. There are no spots or markings on the red
body. If anyone, particularly in Canada or the U.S.A., has spotted
this critter in their garden in the past, I would greatly appreciate
some information: your location (city, state/province, postal/zip
code) and the year that you found it. Feel free to include any tidbits
of info (for example, the species you found it on) that you think might
be useful.
I plan to present some information about this pest at the North
American Lily Society meeting in Edmonton and would like to have some
recent statistics to accompany the talk.
I recently completed my M.Sc. thesis about the lily beetle at Carleton
University in Ottawa, Ontario. If anyone has any sightings to report,
or has any questions regarding the beetle or my work, please contact me
at
.
Thanking you in advance,
Crystal Ernst

They've been in my garden since 1996 - but then again, I'm within 20
miles of their origin here in Massachusetts - lucky me :o(

I think the beetles arrived within in 2 years of that here. Maybe one!

Until there is a better solution then hand picking, I give up on lilies.

Not
my daylilies that are, thankfully unaffected, but glory days of scent are
gone her.

Cheryl



I'm with you, Cheryl.

IN 1995 I started a home nursery, and I was having some great fun selling
bunches of flowers along with produce at our Farmers Market. In June and
July of '96 and '97 I was pocketing some good weekend change when the
Lilies were in bloom. One stalk of Rubrums in a mixed bouquet... YEE HAH!
I had "colonies" -- and was adding more.

In 1997 I saw my first Lily Beetle.

The only bulb lilies that live here anymore are some weedy L. tigridium
that I am rouging out, and one L. Superbum that doesn't seem to be the
least attractive to the Lily Beetle.

All the rest are gone, and I'm not replacing them. I miss them dearly.

Sue
Western Maine.


I'll take those - the moles got my "tiger lilies" and I miss them a bunch.
They remind me of my grandmother's garden.

Cheryl



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