There is hope in the battle against Japanese beetles in Colorado

We can always use good news when it comes to dealing with problem insects in our landscapes. Anyone who has battled Japanese beetles to prevent plant carnage knows the amount of work and dollars it takes to manage them every summer.

Where the Japanese beetle is native, in northern Japan, there are natural insect enemies that keep the populations manageable, and they are not a major problem as they have become along the Front Range and many other states. When the beetles were first detected in New Jersey in 1916, their natural insect enemies weren’t present. Subsequently, Japanese beetle numbers grew and spread unchecked. They had a literal free-for-all buffet table set for them with millions of acres of irrigated lawns and more than 300 favored plant species.

Damage to Virginia creeper vines in Denver from severe feeding by Japanese beetles. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)
Damage to Virginia creeper vines in Denver from severe feeding by Japanese beetles. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)

Natural insect enemies and specific pathogens are collectively called biocontrols, which can cause injury or death to pest insects. A common example of natural pest enemies that gardeners know well are ladybugs, which rid ornamental plants of plant-sucking aphids. Another example is a natural pathogen product that many gardeners use for mosquito larvae in water features that are sold as mosquito dunks, or bits containing the active ingredient Bacillus thuringiensis (Bti) and only toxic to mosquitos and fungus gnats.

This is truly good nature at work.

Over the decades, East Coast and Midwestern states have paved the way for successfully introducing biocontrols to reduce Japanese beetle numbers. Professionals in Colorado followed suit and started the releases in 2015.

Spread this good news far and wide: This is real hope and help for many plants we love to grow here.

The three biocontrols that have been released have been strictly approved, coordinated and regulated by state and federal authorities so they don’t cause harm or have any other unintended consequences to our soil and insect populations, which include pollinators. All three biocontols have been reviewed and permitted for release in Colorado to specifically target Japanese beetle. However, they are not for purchase or allowed for distribution by the general public.

Whitney Cranshaw releases Ovavesicula popilliae fungal spore into grass turf, which infects Japanese beetle larvae. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)
Whitney Cranshaw releases Ovavesicula popilliae fungal spore into grass turf, which infects Japanese beetle larvae. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)

The professionals who began the releases are Whitney Cranshaw, emeritus professor of entomology from Colorado State University, and biological control specialists with the Colorado Department of Agriculture. The long-term goal of the biocontrol releases, according to Cranshaw, is that “one or more of the organisms will establish and reproduce at the release site. The organisms will then spread on their own over time to cover a wide area. As the organisms establish and increase, populations of Japanese beetle will decrease – and these reductions will be permanent.”

A successful outcome from the releases might be that “in ten to fifteen years, there would be three Japanese beetles on your roses instead of ten,” Cranshaw said.

The three biocontrols that have been released include:

  •  A fungal spore pathogen that harms both Japanese beetle adults and their offspring white grubs (larvae). The spore is called Ovavesicula popilliae, and when applied to the soil where JB white grubs are residing, it will become infected by the spore pathogen which then hinders the white grub’s health and longevity. Disease-affected Japanese beetles become more susceptible to winter death, shortened survival as an adult and reduced ability to reproduce. Ovavesicula popilliae has become established in areas where it has been released, including Boulder, Denver, west Arapahoe County and Pueblo.
  • A parasitic fly — also referred to as a tachinid fly and commonly called the winsome fly (botanically named Istocheta aldrichi) — targets adult Japanese beetles. They look very similar to a common house fly. So far, they have been found in Arapahoe County in the Littleton area.
  • A parasitic wasp called Tiphia vernalis targets overwintering Japanese white grubs in the soil under grass turf. The wasp, often called the spring tiphia, are not established at the time of this writing.

There are also plans for future biocontrol releases in various areas along the Front Range.

What is a parasitic insect?

A ladybug will eat pest aphids. In nature (and some horror movies) there are other ways in which good insects kill or consume bad insects. Two of the biocontrols for Japanese beetles are parasitic type insects that eat the pest but in a different life stage of its reproduction.

Japanese beetles love many of our favorite landscape plants. Help is on the way. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)
Japanese beetles love many of our favorite landscape plants. Help is on the way. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)

Parasitic insects, including the Tiphia vernalis and Istocheta aldrichi, lay eggs on the target Japanese beetle. Once the egg grows to the larva stage, the larva uses the Japanese beetle as a food source as it burrows and grows into the host pest.

Once the egg is laid on an adult Japanese beetle, it becomes the food source for the larva of the winsome fly or tachinid wasp. Over time, the larva will pupate and spend its life inside the decaying host pest insect. When it has developed into its adult stage, it will begin the cycle all again looking for a host Japanese beetle.

Thanks to Mother Nature and the whole coordination of predator needing the correct prey at the correct time, the winsome fly has a one-year life cycle just like Japanese beetles (same for Istocheta aldrichi, the spring tiphia wasp).

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