How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Alfalfa
Alfalfa Caterpillar And Armyworm Monitoring
(Reviewed 11/06,
updated 11/06)
In this Guideline:
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Start sweeping for beet armyworm, western yellowstriped
armyworm, and alfalfa caterpillars in the early summer (late May or June, as soon as you see caterpillars in the field) and
continue through early fall. Large numbers of yellow
and white butterflies during late spring or summer is a warning sign that
alfalfa caterpillar populations may be increasing. See SAMPLING
WITH A SWEEP NET for more details
on sweeping.
Use a monitoring
form with treatment
thresholds to record observations.
How to monitor: (View photos to
identify caterpillars)
Take a weekly sweep net sample in fields that have adequate
plant height to monitor for beet armyworm, western yellowstriped armyworm, and
alfalfa caterpillars. Divide each field into 4 sections and take 5 sweeps per
area with a 15-inch diameter sweep net, for a total of 20 sweeps.
Identify, count, and record the number of healthy and
parasitized caterpillars caught in your sweep net and divide that total by the
number of sweeps taken. Record the average number per sweep on a monitoring
form. To determine if caterpillars are parasitized, pull young worms (at least 0.5 inch long) apart to see
if white or green parasitic wasp larvae pop out. Base your population estimates
on the average of all sweeps taken in that field, counting only those armyworms
collected in sweeps that are at least 0.5 inches in length.
Treatment action threshold:
If cutting is not practical or not scheduled soon after
monitoring, treat if there is an average of:
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10 or more
nonparasitized alfalfa caterpillars per sweep.
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15 or more nonparastized
armyworms per sweep.
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10 or more combined nonparasitized
alfalfa caterpillars and armyworms per sweep.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Alfalfa
UC ANR Publication 3430
General Information
C. G. Summers, Entomology, Kearney Agricultural Center, Parlier
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