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Pecan nut casebearer
larva boring into nut
University of
Missouri
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Pecan nut casebearer, Acrobasis nuxvorella, overwinters as
partially grown larvae in small cocoons (hibernacula) located at the
junction of the bud and stem. Larvae leave the cocoons in the early spring
about the time the buds open, feed briefly (about two weeks) on the
exterior of opening buds and then bore into the young tender shoots, where
they mature and pupate. In late May to early June, about the time that the
pecan nuts are pollinated, the adult moths emerge and lay eggs on the
young nuts, typically one per cluster. The eggs hatch three to nine days
later. These first-generation larvae feed for a few days on the exterior
of the buds, then migrate back to the nut clusters and bore into the nuts
at the basal (stem) end. One larva can destroy from one to all of the nuts
in the cluster (see Figure 1). Infested nuts are held together by frass
(waste) and silken threads cast out by the larvae. Larvae feed inside the
nuts for three to four weeks, mature and pupate in one of the last nuts
attacked, and the adults emerge nine to 14 days later.
Most second-generation moths emerge in mid-July. The
second-generation larvae also attack nuts, but the loss is less because an
individual pecan nut casebearer typically requires only one nut for its
development. Third-generation moths emerge during late August and
September, and larvae feed in the nut shuck at the base of the nut, on the
shuck surface and, to some extent, on the leaves.
Eggs are minute and change from white to pink as they
incubate for three to nine days (an average of five days). Most are found
near the flower end of the nut, on and beneath the calyx lobes. A larva
has five pairs of prolegs and changes from olive-gray to gray-brown as it
grows to measure one-half inch. The head is reddish-brown, and the body is
sparsely covered with fine, white hairs. The larval stage lasts from 25 to
33 days. Adult moths are slate-gray with a ridge of long, dark scales on
the basal end of forewings. Moths are one-third inch long, with a wingspan
of four-fifths of an inch.
The first generation is the most damaging. Begin scouting
for pecan nut casebearer eggs/larvae when all the catkins on native trees
have fallen or when the tips of the nuts turn brown after pollination. You
should inspect at least 200 nut clusters. When you find that 1 percent to
3 percent of the nut clusters have been damaged, apply an insecticide.
During years of heavy nut set on native trees, you can delay spraying
until 5 percent of the nut clusters sustain pecan nut casebearer damage.
George S. Smith and Maureen H.
O'Day
Department of Entomology, University of Missouri-Columbia
William Reid
Kansas State University
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