Michigan State University
The next 4 weeks (mid July to mid August)
will be the busiest for Japanese beetles on the golf course. Because their activity level is temperature
dependent, they are the most active on hot sunny days. They will continue to feed on trees and
shrubs, and lay eggs through late July and August, but the onslaught will taper
in late August, and very few will be left by October 1st. Meanwhile, golf course superintendents are
dealing with some unhappy golfers, especially in places where Japanese beetle
has recently become a problem and the golfers are not used to them. At first people may think they could bite or
sting, or they just do not like bugs of any kind. Golfers should be told two things: that
Japanese beetle has recently spread into northern Michigan, and that they are
completely harmless to people.
Superintendents can minimize the nuisance factor to golfers by spraying
tees, greens, and a buffer strip or 20’ surrounding tees and greens with Sevin
(carbaryl), Tempo (cyfluthrin) or
Decathlon (cyfluthrin). Any trees or
shrubs that beetles are feeding on near tees and greens should also be
sprayed. You can also pull most of the
beetles away from tees and greens by placing a Japanese beetle trap 100 – 200’ away from each tee and green. This will attract beetles to the trap and
away from the tees and greens. Don’t
place the traps too close to tees or greens because they can pull beetles in
from as much as an 1/8 mile away. The
traps need to be emptied every 2 – 3 days by dumping the beetle into a bucket
with a few inches of soapy water in it.
Another strategy is to plan ahead for the next year by treating the
larval stage of Japanese beetle, C-shaped white grubs, in July to prevent turf
damage in the fall and next spring, and to reduce the number of beetles that
will emerge next summer. Merit, Arena,
Aloft, Meridian, and many new products
containing imidacloprid, all work very well when applied in July. This will not help with the beetles that are out now, but it will reduce
the number of beetles you have next
year. As you could probably guess,
treating all of the turf on the golf course (wall to wall) has the biggest
impact on how many beetles emerge next year.
However, treating just the irrigated turfgrass also has a big impact
because the females prefer to lay their eggs in moist soil under turfgrass.
Of greater concern to most superintendents is the turf
damage that can be caused by the white grubs feeding on the turf roots in the
fairway. Grub damage to fairways appears
as patches of thin, yellow or dead turf in late September, October, and May. On fairways, more than 5 grubs per square
foot can cause a problem. Even worse is
the damage caused by skunks or raccoons when they tear-up turf to eat
grubs. An application of one of the
insecticides listed above, before August 15th, will prevent grub,
raccoon or skunk damage in the fall and next spring. Be sure to irrigate just before and just
after applying an insecticide for grubs with ½” to 1.0” of water to move the
insecticide into the soil. There is a
high correlation of the incidence of insecticide failure to control grubs with
failure to irrigate immediately after application.
Japanese beetle feeding. |
At MSU we are doing something else to help prevent damage
from Japanese beetle. With funding from
the Michigan Turfgrass Foundation, I have introduced a disease-causing pathogen
of Japanese beetle into Michigan. It is
called Ovavesicula popilliae, and it
only effects Japanese beetle. This is a
naturally occurring pathogen and cannot be purchased. At the Michigan Turfgrass Field Day at the
Hancock Turfgrass Research Center at MSU on Wednesday, August 14th,
we will be providing a small bag of infected Japanese beetle adults to each
participant. See the Michigan Turfgrass
Foundation Website for information on how to register for the field day - http://www.michiganturfgrass.org/
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