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Leatherjackets |
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Key Points
• Leatherjacket infestations can devastate crops that are attacked
• Crops following grass represent the highest risk of economic damage
• Use Risk Assessment Charts to establish fields at most risk
• Soil sampling indicates pest levels in individual fields |
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Introduction
Leatherjackets are the larvae of the Crane fly, Tipula paludosa, or ‘Daddy Long-legs’ and cause widespread damage to winter and spring cereals, grassland, root crops and vegetables. Young cereals are attacked both below and above ground. Underground damage is noticed in winter and spring when seedlings turn yellow and die, leaving bare patches. Affected plants are easily pulled from the ground as their root systems have been severed. During suitable weather conditions in spring, severed leaves indicate surface feeding during the night.
For winter cereals, damage may go unnoticed until the spring, when warmer conditions enable the crop to grow away. However, damage is still being caused, and potential yield compromised, despite the absence of visible symptoms.
Biology
Control Options
The first action must always be to carry out a Risk Assessment. This can be done using the Dursban* WG Leatherjacket Pocket Card. If the Risk Assessment indicates treatment is justified, Dursban WG should be applied at 1.0kg/ha in a water volume of 200 – 1000 litres per hectare when damage is seen or predicted. Controlling Leatherjackets early gives the best economic response to treatment but application during periods of prolonged frosts should be avoided as Leatherjackets are less active near the soil surface under these conditions. Applications when temperatures are above 5°C give best results.
Always check Cereals Pestwatch pages for the most recent bulletins.
Learn more about Dursban WG.
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