View Full Version : tomato pest
BjornBee
08-01-2007, 04:29 PM
In an earlier thread on tomato problems, this pest was found as the culprit. I found one that had been commented on, and suggested to leave it alone. The photo shows a tomato pest playing host to egg sacs.
http://s186.photobucket.com/albums/x236/BjornBee/?action=view¤t=beepictures022.jpg
So the question is, do I do nothing? Will this thing keep eating or is it doomed for a short existance?
Thanks
Jeffzhear
08-01-2007, 04:33 PM
Wow, what a nasty looking bug. Looking forward to reading comments from others...
paintingpreacher
08-01-2007, 05:41 PM
They will eat all the leaves and then start on the tomatoes. I always like to use them for fish bait.
we always called them cut worms because they will cut the top out of tomato plants, kill all you see, they will find a tomato plant anywhere, anytime you see leaves or even limbs gone look for this worm, I would solk that one in gas so it killes all the eggs also.....
nsmith1957
08-01-2007, 07:02 PM
Where there is one there are probably hundreds more. A few years ago I had a hydroponic greenhouse growing tomatos. A storm came up and the wind blew off the greenhouse's plastic covering and it took a few days to get it put back on. A week or so later, I noticed something was eating the leaves up on the tomato plants. When I finally saw what it was doing the eating, and are they hard to see if you don't know what you are looking far, I found hundreds of the critters, over several days, before I finally got them all out of the greenhouse.
Joseph Clemens
08-01-2007, 09:06 PM
In an earlier thread on tomato problems, this pest was found as the culprit. I found one that had been commented on, and suggested to leave it alone. The photo shows a tomato pest playing host to egg sacs.
http://s186.photobucket.com/albums/x236/BjornBee/?action=view¤t=beepictures022.jpg
So the question is, do I do nothing? Will this thing keep eating or is it doomed for a short existance?
ThanksAh, yes, Tomato hornworms, Sphynx moth larvae. If yours has the cocoons on it, I would leave it alone, they will hatch into parasitic wasps that will kill even more of the hornworm larvae.
mike haney
08-01-2007, 09:07 PM
In an earlier thread on tomato problems, this pest was found as the culprit. I found one that had been commented on, and suggested to leave it alone. The photo shows a tomato pest playing host to egg sacs.
http://s186.photobucket.com/albums/x236/BjornBee/?action=view¤t=beepictures022.jpg
So the question is, do I do nothing? Will this thing keep eating or is it doomed for a short existance?
Thanks
those eggs are from a parasitic wasp. i recomend you leave this one alone and the parasites will suck it dry and hatch new wasps. ifyou find a catapillar without these eggs. then by all means hand pick and stomp.:)
Troutsqueezer
08-02-2007, 11:48 AM
Baby raccoons, bird-killing insects, gross-looking hornworms. You must spend a lot of time prowling around the yard with your camera to get those shots. I thought I did that a lot and have 3,000 yard pictures to show for it (thank you digital) but you must really be out there a lot looking for those unusual photo opportunities, huh?
ScadsOBees
08-02-2007, 12:34 PM
Doomed
I used to find cecropia moth caterpillars with those on them, and it made me sooo mad and dissapointed because I would rather have a cool cecropia moth than some stupid parasites. I'd try to pull them off and it was like pulling out the caterpillars liver or something.
Stepped on a big hornworm once, and the entire insides squirted onto my girlfreind's(now wife) brand new white canvas shoes. It didn't wash out....:mad:
Leave the ones with passengers.....
Rick