Return to Insect ID: Habitat
Insect ID: Insects associated with Apples and/or Berries in Maine
Blueberries:
See also UMaine Extension’s Wild Blueberry Insect Fact Sheets and/or the blueberry Integrated Pest and Crop Management page. For highbush blueberries, visit our Growing Highbush Blueberries fact sheet (specifically the “Pest Management” section at the end).
Blueberries:
- Asian Fruit Fly (see Fruit Flies)
- Black Vine Weevil
- Lowbush Blueberry Insect Pests:
- Blueberry Flea Beetle
- Blueberry Maggot
- Blueberry Spanworm
- Blueberry Thrips
- Red-striped Fireworm
- Spotted-wing Drosophila (invasive) (see Fruit Flies)
- Japanese Beetles (on highbush varieties especially)
- Redhumped Caterpillars (Washington State University)
- Rose Chafer Beetles (on highbush varieties especially)
- Spotted Wing Drosophila / Asian Fruit Fly (see Fruit Flies)
- Strawberry Rootworm
- Tussock Caterpillars
- White Grubs
- Yellownecked Caterpillars (Penn State University)
Strawberries:
See also the strawberry pests listed in the New England Small Fruit Management Guide by UMass, and be sure to visit UMaine Extension’s Strawberry IPM pages as well where you’ll find a wealth of information including a strawberry newsletter, strawberry fact sheets, etc.
Strawberries:
- Black Vine Weevil
- Earwigs
- Leafhoppers – including the Potato Leafhopper (part of UMaine Extension’s Potato IPM Program)
- Leafrollers:
- Strawberry Leafroller (Univ. of Illinois) photo link (Univ. of Georgia)
- Red-banded Leafroller (Cornell) photo link
- Oblique-banded Leafroller (Cornell)
- Sap Beetles (Univ. of Minnesota Extension)
- Strawberry Clipper Weevil (also called Strawberry Bud Weevil or Strawberry Root Weevil) (Cornell)
- Strawberry Root Weevil (Oregon State University Extension)
- Strawberry Rootworm
- Tarnished Plant Bug
- Thrips
- White Grubs (including European Chafer grubs and Asiatic Garden Beetle grubs)
- Non-insect Possibility: Cyclamen mites (Univ. of Kentucky); cyclamen mite photo (Univ. of Florida)
Apples:
See also Growing Fruit Trees in Maine – Insect Pests and/or UMaine Extension’s Apple IPM pages, for pest report newsletters, publications, and more! You may also wish to visit the apple section of our plant disease images (scroll to the apple section once you are there), and another helpful site is Cornell’s New York State IPM Fact Sheets for Tree Fruit.
Apples:
- Apple-Boring Beetles (Cornell)
- Apple Maggot
- Codling Moth
- European Apple Sawfly
- European Red Mite
- Fruit Flies
- Japanese Beetles
- Leafhoppers:
- White Apple Leafhopper (Cornell)
- Rose Leafhopper (Washington State Univ.)
- Leafrollers:
- Red-banded Leafroller (Cornell)
- Oblique-banded Leafroller (Cornell)
- Leafminers (Spotted Tentiform) (Cornell)
- Mullein Plant Bugs / Phytophagous Mirid Bugs (Cornell)
- Oriental Fruit Moth (Cornell)
- Plum Curculio (Cornell)
- Roundheaded Apple Tree Borer (Cornell)
- San Jose Scale (Cornell)
- Tarnished Plant Bug
- Yellownecked Caterpillars (Penn State University)
Raspberries:
Raspberries:
- Aphids on Raspberries (Penn State Extension)
- Asian Fruit Fly (see Fruit Flies)
- Candy-striped Leafhopper
- Fruit Flies
- Japanese Beetles
- Raspberry Cane Borer (Univ. of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension)
- Raspberry Cane Maggot (Univ. of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension)
- Raspberry Crown Borer (Univ. of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension)
- Raspberry Fruitworm (Univ. of Minnesota Extension) | Photo of Raspberry Fruitworm Adult (Beetle) (Univ. of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension)
- Raspberry Weevil
- Red-necked Cane Borer (Penn State Extension)
- Rose Chafer beetles
- Spotted Wing Drosophila / Asian Fruit Fly (see Fruit Flies)
- Tarnished Plant Bug