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Saddle Gall Midge |
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Key Points
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Introduction
Biology
There is only one generation per year of Saddle Gall midge. Adults appear from May (but have appeared even earlier) and females lay their distinctive orange-red eggs in linear patterns on the leaf surface in early June. There may be several flights of adults. Eggs typically hatch within one to two weeks. Newly hatched larvae migrate down the leaf to the feeding site underneath the leaf sheath. Larvae feed on stem tissue usually in the upper three internodes which gives rise to the characteristic swollen galls. After about a month of feeding, fully grown larvae migrate down the plant to the soil where they overwinter. Heavy clay soils can promote longer dormancy periods of several years. When conditions are favourable in the spring the larvae break diapauses, become mobile and move to the soil surface before pupating and emerging as adults to complete the lifecycle.
Control Options
There are no approved insecticide treatments with recommendations specifically for control of saddle gall midge.
Saddle gall midge populations are monitored via the Dow AgroSciences Cereals Pestwatch service. For more information and the latest bulletins click here. |
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