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May 29, 2015 7:03 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Eller
Rowan County, North Carolina (Zone 7b)
Thoughts become things!
Help! Nearly all the leaves on my mock orange bush have been consumed by this little bugger! Can you please help identify and recommend an arsenal?
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Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.
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May 29, 2015 7:30 PM CST
Name: Sue
Ontario, Canada (Zone 4b)
Annuals Native Plants and Wildflowers Keeps Horses Dog Lover Daylilies Region: Canadian
Butterflies Birds Enjoys or suffers cold winters Garden Sages Plant Identifier
It looks like a sawfly larva. There are some pics on the web of a "mockorange sawfly" that match but I didn't see any scientific name to properly ID it. One page recommended hand-picking them. I would think a direct hit with insecticidal soap should work. If nobody comes up with an exact ID by then I'll take a look in my bug books tomorrow.
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May 29, 2015 7:42 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Eller
Rowan County, North Carolina (Zone 7b)
Thoughts become things!
Thank you! Recommendation where I can get insecticidal soap?
Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.
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May 29, 2015 9:53 PM CST
Name: Elaine
Sarasota, Fl
The one constant in life is change
Amaryllis Tropicals Multi-Region Gardener Orchids Master Gardener: Florida Irises
Herbs Region: Florida Vegetable Grower Daylilies Birds Cat Lover
Most any nursery, or the garden center at HD or Lowe's will have it. I prefer the local nursery, and if you take a sample of the critter in with you, someone knowledgeable will advise you, as well. (put the crawlie in a jar or ziploc bag, though!)
Elaine

"Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm." –Winston Churchill
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May 29, 2015 10:03 PM CST
Name: greene
Savannah, GA (Sunset 28) (Zone 8b)
I have no use for internet bullies!
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For the insecticidal soap to be effective, you need to spray it directly on the little guys. Why not first try to pick off all the offenders and drop each one into a bucket with a bit of soapy water? Good job for the medium size to large children in the neighborhood.
Sunset Zone 28, AHS Heat Zone 9, USDA zone 8b~"Leaf of Faith"
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May 30, 2015 3:55 AM CST
Name: Sue
Ontario, Canada (Zone 4b)
Annuals Native Plants and Wildflowers Keeps Horses Dog Lover Daylilies Region: Canadian
Butterflies Birds Enjoys or suffers cold winters Garden Sages Plant Identifier
I figured from your picture that yours was a sawfly because it looks like it has too many pro-legs to be a caterpillar, and a consequent web search brought up this page - the picture looks a likely match. Couldn't post it last night as I was on my iPad and for some reason I can't paste URLs into ATP from it.

http://www.walterreeves.com/ga...

another article, but with no picture, is here:
http://blog.syracuse.com/cny/2...

What I don't like is that no scientific name is given in the articles, which makes me wonder exactly what sawfly it is. If you do take it to a garden centre with you, make sure they count the pro-legs to differentiate, and don't try to sell you something that works only on caterpillars. Insecticidal soap should work for either. BTW I wouldn't take it in a plastic baggie, go with a jar. I found out the hard way that critters that can chew leaves can also chew plastic baggies and escape Hilarious!
Last edited by sooby May 30, 2015 4:00 AM Icon for preview
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May 30, 2015 6:46 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Eller
Rowan County, North Carolina (Zone 7b)
Thoughts become things!
Thanks very much! So, there's no preventative I can put on my plant to keep the little critters from coming back?
Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.
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May 30, 2015 9:10 AM CST
Name: Sue
Ontario, Canada (Zone 4b)
Annuals Native Plants and Wildflowers Keeps Horses Dog Lover Daylilies Region: Canadian
Butterflies Birds Enjoys or suffers cold winters Garden Sages Plant Identifier
Some sawflies only have one generation a year so once they're gone they won't be back that same year. So it depends if this particular one has more than one generation, that's where a more precise ID would be useful. The links I gave above suggest it only has one generation, though, in which case once gone for this year it won't be back. You could just keep an eye on the plant to make sure. There are several insecticides labeled for sawflies, you could ask at your local supplier what they recommend and have available for them in your area. Diatomaceous earth can also be used for sawflies but whether that's practical or not would depend on the size of the plant and whether you mind its looking dusty temporarily.
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May 30, 2015 9:20 AM CST
Name: greene
Savannah, GA (Sunset 28) (Zone 8b)
I have no use for internet bullies!
Avid Green Pages Reviewer Keeper of Poultry Vegetable Grower Rabbit Keeper Frugal Gardener Garden Ideas: Master Level
Plant Identifier Region: Georgia Native Plants and Wildflowers Composter Garden Sages Bookworm
Whatever you choose to put on your plants you should always be sure that it will be safe for bees. Thank you.
Sunset Zone 28, AHS Heat Zone 9, USDA zone 8b~"Leaf of Faith"
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May 30, 2015 9:27 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Chris Eller
Rowan County, North Carolina (Zone 7b)
Thoughts become things!
Thanks very much!
Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.
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