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Managing Lawn Pests
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Visible Clues
Knowing your local pests and their life cycles is the key to determining
whether lawn damage is due to insects or not. The rest is a matter
of keeping your eyes open. Most insects are large enough to be visible,
so don't wait for your grass to start dying to find out if there's
a problem.
Some evening, the presence of sod webworms may become apparent when
you see their adult form, a buff-colored moth, zig-zagging across
the lawn. And consider those June beetles banging against the screens
at night or the Japanese beetles eating your roses--they should
alert you to the fact that their larvae may be damaging your lawn's
grass roots. Another clue to the presence of underground insects
is small upturned areas where skunks dig by night and birds congregate
by day.
Looking closely at the lawn, even using a magnifying glass, will
enable you to see signs of chewing or the tiny light spots indicative
of sucking insects. You might also note the tunnel openings of mole
crickets or actually see thatch-level insects such as armyworms,
chinch bugs, leafhoppers, and aphids.
Becoming an insect sleuth isn't difficult, and your persistence
will pay off. The byword here is vigilance--making a regular habit
of closely observing your turf. And remember, just a few bugs are
nothing to worry about. You only need to take action when the population
approaches damaging levels, remembering that extermination is not
a reasonable goal.
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