Tobacco Budworm
Tobacco budworm, Heliothis virescens (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) also attacks and feeds on a wide variety of garden flowers, especially geraniums. The caterpillars feed on foliage and flower buds of geranium, reducing plant vigor and blooms, respectively.
As the official name implies, the tobacco budworm is a serious pest of tobacco in the southern United States. There is a long list of crops and vegetables it attacks, including alfalfa, clover, cotton, soybean, cabbage, cantaloupe, lettuce, pea, pepper, squash, and tomato. The favorite herbaceous flower for this insect is the geranium, though it also feeds on impatiens, petunia, nicotiana, ageratum, dandelion, marigold, and several other bedding plants.
Tobacco budworm caterpillars show remarkable variation in color from black to red to green and grow up to 1.5 inches in length. Color may vary with the food they have eaten. Larger caterpillars have alternating light and dark stripes. Larvae live and grow for about a month and there are at least 2 generations per summer. Populations are highest in late summer and fall. Read more and see photos of moths and caterpillars at BugGuide.
It is unclear if the tobacco budworm survives through the winter in Iowa or if new arrivals (moths) blow in from the southern U.S. every summer. The budworm spends the winter a few inches deep in the soil as a pupa. If winter temperatures are extremely cold (-20 degrees F), the pupae do not survive. However, soil temperatures may not reach low enough to kill pupae in some winters or in protected areas near buildings. Budworms can overwinter in the soil of potted plants that were outdoors during the summer and then moved indoors for the winter. Budworms also may be active year-round in greenhouses. Greenhouse infestations may be responsible for some of the budworm problems seen here in the upper Midwest.
Handpicking and discarding caterpillars as they occur is recommended. Traditional insecticide sprays are likely to be ineffective because of widespread resistance to insecticides, especially pyrethroids, and because small caterpillars are often concealed in tunnels and not exposed to insecticide. If sprays are attempted consider bifenthrin, spinosad, or permethrin. While Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis), is effective on caterpillars, it does not work well against tobacco budworms.
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