Early Season Corn Pests, VE To V8 |
Corn Growth Stage |
VE |
V2 |
V4 |
V6 |
V8 |
V10 |
V12 |
VT |
R1 |
Below-ground Insect Pests |
Seedcorn Maggot |
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Seedcorn Beetle |
White Grubs |
Wire Worm |
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Corn Rootworm Larvae |
Above-Ground Insect Pests |
Sod Webworm |
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Grape Colaspis |
Black, Dingy, Clayback Cutworms |
Chinch Bug |
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Billbug |
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Common Stalk Borer |
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1st Generation European Corn Borer |
Above-Ground Non-Insect Pests |
Millipedes |
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Slugs |
Below-Ground
When searching for below-ground pests, a small garden trowel or pocketknife is a handy tool to use. Early season insects
can be found attacking the seed (seedcorn maggot, seedcorn beetle), the seed and below-ground parts of the seedling
(wireworm, sugarcane beetle), they may be more limited to the roots (white grubs), or attack the under-ground stem
(sandhill cutworm). White grub is a generic term for the larval stage of insects like the Japanese beetle, European
chafer, and May or June beetles. True white grubs are the larval stage of May and June beetles. To identify the grubs,
the raster pattern, or the setae (hair) pattern on the posterior end is used. The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food,
and Rural Affairs has developed an excellent publication, Agronomy Guide for Field Crops, that can be used to help
identify white grubs in the field. Corn rootworm larvae may be
present during the later stages of early season growth but may be too small to readily detect. If detected, they will
have a brown to black head and a brown to black anal plate.
Wireworms.
Frank Peairs, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org.
Seed corn maggot.
White grub.
Corn rootworm larvae.
Scott Bauer, USDA Agricultural Research Service, Bugwood.org
Above-Ground
Some of these insect pests feed above-ground but can also be found under-ground. The cutworm species feed above-ground
at night but spend the day under soil clods.
Black cutworm.
Roger Schmidt, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Bugwood.org.
Claybacked cutworm.
James Kalisch, University of Nebraska, Bugwood.org
Maize billbug.
Clemson University - USDA Cooperative Extension Slide Series, Bugwood.org
Common Stalk Borer.
James Kalisch, University of Nebraska, Bugwood.org
European corn borer.
Frank Peairs, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org.
Millipede.
Joseph Berger, Bugwood.org.
Legal Statements
Performance may vary from location to location and from year to year, as local growing, soil and weather conditions may
vary. Growers should evaluate data from multiple locations and years whenever possible and should consider the impacts
of these conditions on the grower’s fields.
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