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Lace bug |
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Common Name: Lace bug Description: Adult lace bugs are 1/8 to 1/4-inch
long and flattened. The wings and flattened areas behind the head are
gauze-like or lace-like and make these insects appear rectangular and
whitish or silvery. Nymphal stages lack fully-developed wings and appear
oval, marked with blackened areas and adorned with spines. Life Cycle:Adults become active in the spring when leaves appear on the host plant. Eggs are glued to the underside of leaves among the hair (pubescence). Nymphs hatching from eggs in a few days and develop through five stages (instars) before becoming adults. Development from egg to adult occurs in about 30 days depending on temperature and other environmental conditions. Three to five generations can be produced annually. Winter is spent as an adult in crevices of host plant bark. Habitat and Food Source(s), Damage:All life stages occur together on the undersurface of leaves on sycamore, ash and hickory. The upper surface of infested foliage becomes marked with white to yellowish (chlorotic) and later brown (necrotic) speckles. The underside of infested leaves become marked with black varnish-like excrement spots and cast skins of previous developmental stages often remain attached to infested leaves. Lace bug damage to broad-leaved evergreens (azalea, laurel, pyracantha, rhododendron) will be evident for more than a year unless injured foliage is removed. These species overwinter as eggs inserted into leaf veins or cemented to the leaves. Hawthorn lace bug damage to pyracantha usually occurs in mid-July. By late August, most of the leaves may be yellowed (chlorotic) and non-functional. Pest Status: Common sucking insects that occur on many Texas trees and shrubs, injuring foliage and detracting from the plants beauty; high numbers of lace bugs cause plant stress or even death; medically harmless. Management: See Insect and Mite Related Management. For additional information, contact your local Texas AgriLife Extension agent or search for other state Extension offices. Literature: Boring 1979; Johnson and Lyon 1988. |
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