Skip to main content
Hill and Furrow

They're baaaack! Scouting tips and thresholds for Japanese beetles.

When applying post emergence herbicides in several of the Northwestern Research Center's soybean fields over the last week or so, research specialist Marty Johnson noticed large clusters of Japanese beetles feeding on volunteer corn plants. When one beetle lands to feed it tends to attract a lot of friends and mates (Figures).

Japanese beetle ID. Japanese beetles are oval shaped and have an iridescent metallic sheen. They have a green head and thorax and copper colored outer wings with a green stripe down the center. There are also five white 'racing stripes' along each side of the beetle under the wings towards the posterior end, and two on the rear end. These are actually small white tufts of hair called setae (Figures). There are several Japanese beetle look-alikes, but the Japanese beetle can be distinguished by these white tufts of hair.

Japanese beetle behavior. Feeding damage on soybean and corn was also observed (Figures). This damage can be alarming, particularly if individual leaves are in tatters. Often-times the beetles tend congregate on field edges, and so damage occurs on the edge of the field. Scouting more than just the outside edge of the field should help to inform your decision on whether to consider an insecticide spray. Just sampling the outer edges of the field may over-estimate beetle density throughout the field.

Management recommendations: Soybean. Ms. Kelly Estes and Dr. Mike Gray of the University of Illinois have summarized information about the Japanese beetle on field crops in a fact sheet on the U of I's IPM website. For soybean, treatment recommendations depend upon the growth stage of the plants. Thresholds for treatment are 30% defoliation before bloom and 20% defoliation between bloom and pod-fill.

It may be difficult to train the eye to estimate defoliation, but a photo from Dr. Marlin Rice of Iowa State University, may help with visualizing the differences among the different levels of defoliation. One way to help train the eye is to imagine taking all of the holes in the leaf/leaflet and condensing them into one area. You can then more easily estimate how much is gone by relating this 'image' to the total leaf area. This is something that takes practice.

Corn. Corn recommendations are a little bit more cut and dried. Consider using an insecticide if during silking you have 1) three or more beetles per ear and 2) silks are clipped shorter than ½ inch and 3) pollination is less than 50% completed.