Grasshopper Wilkes Barre PA

Pest grasshoppers can be as large as 3" long. There are many species of grasshoppers in North America, and about 30 of these qualify as garden pests in Wilkes Barre. They are most damaging in the center of the continent in a band extending from Minnesota and Montana in the north to Texas and New Mexico in the south.

Hall's Flowerworld
(570) 654-0662
460 Slocum Ave
Exeter, PA
Wild Birds Unlimited
(570) 675-9900
50 1/2 Dallas Shopping Ctr
Dallas, PA
Skeeter's Garden Ctr
(570) 646-8550
Rte 115 S
Blakeslee, PA
Kushkowski Nursery & Garden
(724) 352-5859
411 N Pike Rd
Sarver, PA
Wild Bird Center
(610) 497-9453
3452 Pennell Rd
Aston, PA
Flower Tent
(570) 693-0617
906 Wyoming Ave
Wyoming, PA
Georgetti's Garden Ctr
(570) 342-1308
3025 Pittston Ave
Scranton, PA
Endless Mountains Daylily Farm (includes native PA plants)
570 586 4387
RR2 Box 142 A
Falls, PA
Meder's-Nursery & Garden Ctr
(412) 653-7020
360 Regis Ave.
Pittsburgh, PA
Global Chemical And Supply
2100 Duke St
Reading, PA
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Grasshopper


Pest grasshoppers can be as large as 3" long.

There are many species of grasshoppers in North America, and about 30 of these qualify as garden pests. They are most damaging in the center of the continent in a band extending from Minnesota and Montana in the north to Texas and New Mexico in the south.

All species and life stages of grasshoppers look essentially the same: Long narrow bodies, with long angled back legs suited to jumping, and a head featuring large eyes and chewing mouthparts. Adult grasshoppers are winged and can fly a good distance, but juveniles are wingless. Most overwinter as eggs in untilled soil. There are usually 1 or 2 generations per year.

Like many other pest populations, grasshopper populations rise and fall. In peak years, grasshoppers eat all the plants they encounter, wiping out entire gardens and fields. Initial signs of feeding by young grasshoppers are jagged and tattered holes chewed in leaves.

Control

Cover plants with fabric row covers. The protozoan disease, Nosema locustae, is available commercially in a bait formulation, and is best applied early in the season.

Photography by the National Gardening Association

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