Insect Gallery

Insect Details

Hickory Shoot Curculio
Conotrachelus aratus
Adults are small, dark gray to reddish brown beetles about 3/16 inch long, with slightly curved snouts approximately one-third their body length. Larvae are small, legless, creamy-white grubs with brown heads. Larvae bore in the pith of new shoot growth on pecan and hickory.
Adults overwinter in ground trash or debris in and around pecan orchards. Adults normally emerge from overwintering during March and April, mate, and oviposit in tender new growth. Larvae hatch and tunnel in shoots and leaf stems for 2 to 4 weeks. Fully-grown grubs exit the shoots through irregular, round holes, drop to the ground and pupate in the soil. Typically, adults emerge from the soil in August and September, although there may be some adult emergence throughout the summer. These adults are thought to overwinter. There is normally only one generation per year.
Larvae tunnel in tender shoots and leaf stems, weakening the shoots and sometimes causing terminal breakage or die-back. If breakage or die-back is not evident, injury may be recognized as small, sunken, brackish, triangular spots where eggs were laid in new shoots, or as irregular holes in the shoots following larval emergence. Heavy infestations (50% or more of terminals) may occur. Infestations are frequently heaviest in young trees and other trees not under a good spray program in late summer and early fall the previous year.