Blissus leucopterus leucopterus

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chinch bug
image_caption
Photo by Art Cushman, USDA; Property of the Smithsonian Institution, Department of Entomology, Bugwood.org
Taxonomy
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Hexapoda (including Insecta)
Order: Hemiptera
Family: Blissidae
Genus: Blissus
Species: leucopterus
Subspecies: leucopterus
Scientific Name
Blissus leucopterus leucopterus
(Say)

Authors: Dr. Randy Hudson, Dr. David Adams, University of Georgia

Contents


Description

Chinch bugs are small insects with sucking mouthparts. Adults appear black with clear or silver wings. Nymphs vary in color as they mature. First instar nymphs will appear orange in color. As the nymphs mature, they progressively become darker in color with distinctive white stripes appearing across their upper surface.

Hosts

Corn, sorghum, millets, wheat, barley and lawn grasses.

Damage

Chinch bugs feed by piercing the plant and sucking out the plant juices. Chinch bugs are often considered soil insects due to the location of their injury which is at or just below soil level. Damaged plant tissue will often rot due to secondary injury from digestive enzymes and pathogens that are present during feeding. Damaged plants will often express a host of nutritional maladies. Stunted, yellow, wilting, and dying plants are all symptoms of chinch bug injury. Damaging populations of chinch bugs that develop in grain and forage systems are nearly impossible to control. Conservation tillage systems enhance chinch bug problems in grains. Chinch bugs are typically more of a problem in dry years.

Life Cycle

Chinch bugs overwinter as adults. Adults emerge in the spring, mate and lay eggs at the base of developing grass or grain crops. First spring generation develops on wheat and other winter grain crops. Most infestations in agronomic systems occur as chinch bugs migrate from winter grains into summer grass crops. There are six developmental life stages from egg to adult. It is believed there are 2-3 generations per year.

Control

Treat for chinch bugs in grains when numerous chinch bugs are present and conditions are favorable for continued development. There are no labeled pesticides for chinch bug control in grain millets.

Originally compiled from

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