The plum curculio, Conotrachelus nenuphar (Herbst), is an important early-season pest of tree fruits. They can cause considerable damage to apple, pear, apricot, peach, plum, nectarine, cherry and other fruits.
Plum Curculio Description
Plum curculio adults are a type of weevil (or snout beetle), approximately 6 mm (¼ inch) in length with a mottled combination of brown, black and gray colors over the body. They have four small humps on their wing covers (elytra) and a characteristic curved snout.
The adults overwinter in ground debris within woodlands or along field edges and begin moving into tree fruit plantings in the spring to feed on buds, flowers and newly formed fruit. Egg-laying begins as soon as fruit set occurs and can continue for about four to six weeks.
Plum Curculio Symptoms
Surface feeding and egg-laying by weevils can scar or deform fruit by harvest. The crescent-shaped scars cut into the fruit surface from egg-laying are a characteristic sign of plum curculio damage. In apple, plum curculio larvae are unable to complete development within growing fruit because of the pressure exerted by the hard, expanding tissue. However, feeding by larvae can cause fruit to drop prematurely from trees and it is within these apples that they are able to complete development.
Larvae will generally spend two to three weeks feeding within fruit before exiting
to pupate in the soil. The next generation adults emerge in late summer and also
feed on fruit, but they generally do not reproduce until the following spring.
Plum Curculio Control
There are few effective non-chemical methods for controlling plum curculio in tree
fruits. However, home orchardists can help reduce future populations by promptly
picking up and destroying any fallen fruit from the ground (particularly from May
through June).
Adult populations can be suppressed in the spring with well-timed applications
of effective insecticides immediately after petal fall. Insecticides labeled for
use against plum curculio, and available for homeowners include carbaryl (Sevin),
malathion and kaolin clay (Surround). Care should be taken when using carbaryl
and malathion because these products can be highly toxic to pollinators and beneficial
insect predators, and may promote outbreaks of secondary pests (e.g., mites). In
addition, care should be taken when using carbaryl in apples because it can act
as a fruit thinner when applied within two to three weeks after bloom. For organic
growers, kaolin clay is a particle film that when applied to fruit and foliage
helps discourage feeding and egg-laying.