Squash Vine Borer Wilkes Barre PA

Squash vine borers are pests of crops east of the Rockies. The adult is a moth that lays its eggs on the stems near the base of the plant in late spring to early summer.

Flower Tent
(570) 693-0617
906 Wyoming Ave
Wyoming, PA
Wild Birds Unlimited
(570) 675-9900
50 1/2 Dallas Shopping Ctr
Dallas, PA
Endless Mountains Daylily Farm (includes native PA plants)
570 586 4387
RR2 Box 142 A
Falls, PA
Hahn Nursery Garden Ctr
(412) 635-7475
5443 Babcock Blvd
Pittsburgh, PA
Greentree Nurseries
610- 395-8400
5300 Crackersport Road
Allentown, PA
Hall's Flowerworld
(570) 654-0662
460 Slocum Ave
Exeter, PA
Georgetti's Garden Ctr
(570) 342-1308
3025 Pittston Ave
Scranton, PA
Skeeter's Garden Ctr
(570) 646-8550
Rte 115 S
Blakeslee, PA
special-tworms
570 629 0847
3362h
reeders, PA
Pine Hollow Nursery
(724) 226-0211
887 Bachman Rd
Natrona Heights, PA
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Squash Vine Borer


Typical signs of squash vine borer infestation.

Squash vine borers are pests of crops east of the Rockies. The adult is a moth that lays its eggs on the stems near the base of the plant in late spring to early summer. Fat, white caterpillars with brown heads hatch out and tunnel into the stems to feed, causing sudden wilting of all or part of a squash vine. If you cut open the stem of the wilted vine lengthwise, you'll find it filled with sawdustlike frass (droppings) and one or more caterpillars. The borer prefers squashes but will occasionally infest cucumbers and melons as well. In the Deep South there can be two generations per year; in the North, only one.

Prevention and Control

Slit open wilted vines and remove borers, then cover the cut with moist soil to encourage the vine to reroot. Remove vines as soon as the growing season is over to interrupt the life cycle of second generation larvae. If borers are historically a problem in your garden, place a shovelful of soil at one or more locations along the vines to encourage more roots to develop. If a borer does infest the vine, these additional roots can help the plant survive and produce a crop.

Photography by Charlie Nardozzi/National Gardening Association

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