With the growing season upon us, Organic Daily Post is constructing plant-specific articles addressing how best to protect your backyard Garden of Eden from plant-damaging insects. These easy to read and informative articles show you what to look for to know if your garden has been bugged. We tell you what the bad bugs look like, offer a little about them, and provide tips on preemptive measures you can take. In addition, we will advise you on how to eradicate them once they arrive.
By Any Other Name
Whoever first uttered the words “don’t bug me,” may well have been a gardener. Bugs, pests, insects, invaders, or whatever you want to call them, these garden gorgers have plagued farmers and gardeners alike since time immemorial. Knowing what to look for and use when it comes to these enemy invaders will help you get the most from your garden regardless of its size. In specific, let’s take a look at potato bugs.
Potato Bug Invaders
Potatoes are by far the most popular vegetable grown in America, but they rank fourth in crops grown around the world behind maize (corn), wheat, and rice. According to the Idaho Potato Commission, the United States produces around 13 billion pounds of potatoes each year.
Be it baked, mashed, fried, or chipped, Americans consume an estimated 117 pounds of potatoes per person, per year. While that may sound like a lot, Europeans consume nearly twice that amount, or over 200 pounds per person, annually.
When it comes to potato plants, the only creature that can rival those consumption figures is the potato bug, although they mostly eat the leaves and not the potato itself.
Meet the Beetles (well, one anyway)
Essentially, there are two insects most commonly referred to as potato bugs. Number one is the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata). The Colorado potato beetle is also called the ten-striped spearman, the ten-lined potato beetle, or just plain ol’ potato bug. The second insect behind these potato beetles is the Jerusalem cricket (Stenopelmatus fuscus).
The Colorado Potato Bug
These destructive potato beetles are less than half an inch long and are easily recognized by their yellowish-orange body sporting five stripes on each of their two elytra (wing cases). Their tough shells strongly resemble a striped seed with legs and a head. For being only 3/8 of an inch in length, potato beetles are voracious eaters. They can damage and even kill a plant quickly if you do not get rid of them using some form of pest control.
Life Cycle
Potato beetles grow from egg to adult in just about three weeks. Full-grown larvae burrow into the soil to pupate (transform to adults) and become active in the spring as the temperature rises. Once they emerge from the soil and complete reproduction duties, the female lays clutches of orange eggs in batches of a couple dozen or so on the underside of the leaf. When these potato beetle eggs hatch, they feed on the leaves of the host plant.
Interestingly, something in the potato bug’s DNA attracts them to plants of the Solanaceae family, also known as nightshade, including peppers, tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplants. For the leaves of the potato plant, potato bugs are double trouble, as both the adult and larval beetles feed on them.
The Jerusalem Cricket
The Jerusalem cricket is a strange-looking, nocturnal creature that also feeds on plants of the Solanaceae family. A cousin to the grasshopper, it has a bulbous, yellow head, six legs, and a black, circular-striped body. It is wingless and a slow mover most times, especially during the breeding season. It is not aggressive, but it can deliver a painful bite when irritated.
In addition to its scary looks, the Jerusalem cricket is somewhat of an enigma in the insect world. With their “humped back,” they classify in the camel cricket family, although technically they are not crickets. It is also not from Jerusalem but lives in the western portion of the United States. If you live east of the Texas border, you are pretty safe from them.
Most potato bugs feed above soil level, but the Jerusalem cricket is an exception. These strange creatures feed below the soil and dine on the actual roots and tubers of the potato and other plants. Like Colorado potato beetles, they gravitate to plants of the nightshade variety. Peppers, eggplants, tomatoes, and potatoes can have considerable crop damage if gardeners do not control them immediately.
After mating, the female will sometimes kill and eat the male. Later, she will dig a shallow hole in the ground with her spiny back legs and deposit her eggs there. When hatched, the larvae chow down on the roots and tubers just like their parents did.
What to Look For
You don’t need a degree in entomology to spot trouble in the garden. The telltale signs of leaf damage from these pests can be quite evident. Curled leaves that are beginning to brown and show signs of stress are easy to spot. You can be sure they have become a meal when the leaves look like the green material has been removed, leaving only netting.
Fighting Back
The potato bug is a survivor and possesses the uncanny ability to quickly become pesticide-resistant, making it difficult to treat with insecticides. However, this fact doesn’t mean you can’t deal with them.
So what can you do? Yearly crop rotation in the spring and fall seasons helps to kill them off when you till them into the soil. Another effective measure is to plant early potatoes that you can sow sooner than others. Use species that mature within 75 to 90 days, before the potato bugs kick it into high gear. While there are many varieties of potato deemed early season producers, time and space allow mentioning only a few you may consider planting.
A popular heirloom variety is the Irish Cobbler potato. Historians believe this potato originated in Ireland, and Irish cobblers grew it in the mid-1800s. This little potato matures early and tastes delicious.
The prolific Red Norland potato falls under this category of early producers, as well as the King Harry potato, which is actually resistant to the Colorado potato beetle.
Another possible method for fighting these potato beetles and bugs is to use naturally occurring neem oil as a repellent. This tropical substance is a great way to prevent these insects from invading your potatoes.
The Hands-on Approach
One of the best ways to control potato beetles and bugs is through regular inspection of your plants on a daily basis. Checking out the underside of the leaves of your plants for potato bugs and their eggs will help keep the damage in check. It doesn’t take long for these bugs to harm your plants, so stay on top of your inspections.
When you do spot a potato bug on a leaf, pick it off manually. How you destroy them is up to you. The same goes for eggs found on the back of leaves. Remove the leaf if damaged too badly and crush all the eggs underfoot or toss them and the bug into a pail of soapy water. Admittedly, this may be difficult to do with a larger garden.
For a preemptive strike and further maintenance, a solution of soapy water and cayenne pepper is a good deterrent. You can apply this mixture through the use of a spray bottle. You should spray it directly onto both sides of the plant’s leaves. Repeat as needed, especially after a rain.
Biological Warfare
Biologically, there are a few natural enemies of the potato bug. Stinkbugs and ladybugs enjoy dining on the eggs of these insects, and the fungus Beauvaria bassiana will kill both adults and their larvae. However, unless you have them already, don’t count on them for much help. They can only eat so much and are less effective in extensive gardens where the potato bug population can be substantial.
Baccilus thuringiensis, also known as BT, is a naturally occurring bacterium mixed in a commercial solution that is available to the home gardener. When applied, it is toxic to potato bugs.
In Closing
We hope you learned enough from this article to get you detecting and protecting your beloved plants from these enemy invaders. Follow some of these guidelines, and you’ll be well on your way to growing and maintaining a healthy garden all summer long.