The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Georgia FACES SEARCH STORIES:  
"News to use about Georgia Family, Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences"    November 23, 2009


  Calendar
  Economics
  Environment
  Home and Garden
  Lifestyles
  Science
  State & Region

The University of Georgia
UGA Home
CAES Home
GA FACES Home
 
Latest News
Media Resources
Tips & Trivia
Q&A
Special Info Sites
Images
Infographics
Other News
Search Archives
 
Subscribe Me!
About Us
Contact Us
   
 
September 3, 2008
 
Pretty pest causes ugly damage
 
Lace bug species finds ornamental grasses delectable.
 
Despite its dainty name, the lace bug can cause major headaches for nurserymen and homeowners across the country. University of Georgia researchers recently identified a species that has never been recorded in Georgia. And, it has taken a liking to ornamental grasses.
Complete Story
Photo: Sharon Dowdy
University of Georgia entomologist Kris Braman stumbled upon a lace bug species that, until now, had not been recorded in Georgia. Unlike its relatives who prefer azaleas and chrysanthemums, this species feeds on ornamental grasses.

By Sharon Dowdy
University of Georgia

Despite its dainty name, the lace bug can cause major headaches for nurserymen and homeowners across the country. University of Georgia researchers recently identified a species that has never been recorded in Georgia. And, it has taken a liking to ornamental grasses.

Over the past three years, UGA entomologist Kris Braman has evaluated ornamental grasses in plots on the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences’ Griffin, Ga., campus. This summer, she and CAES graduate student Evelyn Carr discovered lace bugs on an experimental line of ornamental grass called Pennisetum.

Feed on trees and ornamentals, too

Lace bugs commonly feed on azaleas, chrysanthemums, cotoneasters and sycamores, Carr said, but not on ornamental grasses.

Lace bugs live on the undersides of leaves. When feeding, they stick their mouthparts into the leaf and suck out the cell contents. This causes the top side of the leaf to be discolored with white dots. They can further discolor leaves by laying their eggs on the undersides.

“They stress the plant and harm it aesthetically,” Carr said. “So on our ornamental grasses, its damage would be considered very extensive.”

Making a big problem bigger

Left unchecked, the tiny pest could have a definite economic impact on the state’s landscape industry. “Ornamental grasses have become a staple in the landscape,” Carr said. “You see them everywhere.”

Georgia nurserymen, landscapers and homeowners spend more than $1.7 million annually to control lace bugs on ornamental plants. The pest still causes more than $300,000 in damage each year.

To properly identify the new species, they sent a sample to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Systematic Entomology Laboratory in Maryland. It was identified as Leptodictya plana.

“This is a species we know very little about,” Carr said. “There’s only been one scientific paper published on it.”

Lots to learn about new species

As part of her thesis, Carr plans to determine the lace bug’s biology, origin, reproductive traits and more.

“The ultimate goal is to determine the best way to control it,” she said.

This species is closely related to the sugarcane lace bug which is a huge problem in Hawaii and South America, she said.

“It’s normally found in Texas, Mississippi, Arizona and other dry states,” she said. “Dr. Braman hypothesizes that it has increased in Georgia because of the dry weather associated with the drought.”

This lace bug species could cause problems in Georgia, but it can benefit some regions, she said.

“Out West they are looking at this (lace bug) as a good thing,” Carr said. “It feeds on bufflegrass which is considered a noxious weed there.”

Braman and Carr are raising this lace bug species in their laboratories to identify other plants it will feed on.

 
 
Back to Top
FORMATTED FILES
  View 'Clean' Text File
  Email Text File
 
 
AUTHOR
Sharon Dowdy
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
770-229-3219

(Sharon Dowdy is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
SOURCE
Evelyn Carr
770-228-7288
 
 
 
MULTIMEDIA

Graphics included in this story:
  orlacebuglr.jpg
  orlacebug.jpg

Photo: Sharon Dowdy
High-resolution image of Dr. Kris Braman checking ornamental grass for signs of Leptodictya plana lace bug.

 

 


 
 
Georgia FACES Calendar | Economics | Environment | Home & Garden | Lifestyles | Science | State & Region | Latest News
Media Resources | Tips & Trivia | Q&A | Special Info Sites | Images | Infographics | Other News | Search Archives
UGA Home | CAES Home | GA FACES Home | Subscribe Me! | About Us | Contact Us
"News to use about Georgia Family, Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences" © 2009 The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
An equal opportunity/affirmative action organization committed to a diverse work force