Buzzing-Bombing Beetles, an Unusual Grub, and a Wasp

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Green June Beetles (Cotinis nitida, family Scarabaeidae) are making their annual appearance en masse to terrorize gardeners, golfers, sunbathers, small children, and pets as they buzz home lawns and golf courses.  Despite the "June" in their common name, these beetles always appear on the scene in July in Ohio.

 

 

Buzz-Bombing Beetles

The large, metallic green beetles make an audible "buzzing" sound as they follow a low-level flight plan cruising at about 2 – 3' above the ground.  This coupled with a penchant for remaining confined to certain patches of turfgrass make these beetles a legitimate summer oddity.

 

Green June Beetle

 

Green June Beetle

 

Green June Beetle

 

Unlike many of their scarab cousins, I've never seen green June Beetles feeding on plant leaves and there's a good reason.  The adults have spatulate mandibles adapted to a “soft diet.”  They can damage ripened fruit but will also feed on oozing sap and other plant juices.  About all they could do with a leaf would be to tickle it a bit.

 

Green June Beetle

 

The beetles seek turfgrass with high levels of organic matter (e.g. thatch) in which to lay eggs.  It has been speculated that this attraction to decomposing organic matter explains why large numbers of adults will cruise above certain lawns while ignoring neighboring lawns.  The same is true with golf courses with the beetles focusing on certain areas.

 

 

A Most Unusual White Grub

Green June beetle grubs are one of the largest and strangest white grubs you'll ever see in Ohio.  The mature grubs are huge measuring well over 1" in length.  They look like white grubs on steroids.

 

Green June Beetle

 

Green June Beetle

 

The huge grubs also practice an unusual mode of locomotion.  They crawl along on their backs in an undulating, rolling motion that causes them to superficially resemble caterpillars.  Their legs are smaller than those of other white grubs, particularly in comparison to the size of their bodies.  Some have speculated their leg size is an adaptation to life in a burrow while their unusual style of crawling reconciles having small legs.

 

I posted a YouTube video several years ago showing this unusual upside-down crawling.  You can view the video by clicking this hotlink:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EF8UeznxE5M

 

Unlike other Scarab beetle larvae found in turfgrass, green June beetle grubs burrow 10 – 12" vertically into the soil and they remain closely associated with these burrows.  They primarily feed on decaying organic matter such as thatch and much of their damage to turfgrass is associated with their burrowing and tunneling behavior.  However, they have been known to feed on turfgrass producing damage that appears as irregular patches.

 

Green June Beetle

 

The grubs venture out of their burrows in the late evening or during the night to feed or to go on an upside-down crawl-about in search of more food.  They may also be driven out by heavy rains to appear in large numbers meandering across driveways and sidewalks or dropping into swimming pools. 

 

 

Management

Despite their large size, green June beetle grubs seldom cause injury to turf equal to that caused by Japanese beetles or masked chafers. They are generally considered a nuisance pest.

 

Control efforts should focus on reducing organic matter, particularly thatch, beneath infested lawns.  For example, thatch reduction using core aeration to enhance aerobic decomposition may eventually make infested lawns less attractive as grub development sites by these buzz-bombing beetles.

 

Thatch

 

Applications of organic matter to turfgrass should also be considered with caution.  Anecdotal reports from turfgrass managers and others have pointed to a possible link between extremely heavy applications of garden compost or composted sewage sludge and the subsequent appearance of the buzz-bombing beetles the following year.

 

 

A Grub Nemesis, Pollinator, and Lawn Cruiser

Blue-Winged Wasps (Scolia dubia) are named for their dark blue wings.  These large hairy wasps may be spotted in late summer to early fall scrambling around on flowers to sip nectar, most often on common goldenrod (Solidago canadensis).  They are a plant pollinator.

 

Blue-Winged Wasp

 

They are also a parasitoid; the nemesis of green June beetles.  Female wasps dig into the soil until they find a green June beetle grub, or they will simply enter the grub's soil burrow.  The wasp first stings and paralyzes the grub, then they lay an egg on the grub's body.  When the egg hatches, the wasp larva feeds leech-like on its hapless grub victim until the grub is no more

 

Later this season, you may see blue-winged wasps making low-level flights only a few inches above turfgrass infested with green June beetle grubs.  However, these are male wasps so they don’t have stingers.  They are awaiting the emergence of new females to … do what insects do.

 

Their numbers may be impressive as reported in a study published in 2016 in the Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society.  The study site was a farmhouse near Marshall, Virginia, and here is a quote from the paper:  “Although some males could be found flying slowly and erratically low over the grass throughout the entire front lawn, the males were concentrated in an area roughly 25 m2.  Here, during the peak of activity there were dozens, if not hundreds, of mate-searching males, flying over the portions of the study area in the sun.”

 

I’ve seen blue-winged wasps cruising lawns in Ohio, but never in the numbers reported in the paper.  Still, it’s important to remember that just like in American Graffiti, the cruisers are males.  So, they can’t sting.  Although the females can sting, they are not aggressive.  I’ve gotten very close while taking pictures and have never been buzzed.

 

Blue-Winged Wasp

 

The bottom line is that blue-winged wasps provide a twofer both as a pollinator and a parasitoid.  It demonstrates the value of providing a nectar source, in this case, goldenrod, to help draw in an enemy of an insect pest.  It's a good example of how butterfly gardens (a.k.a. pollinator gardens) can serve as an important component in an overall pest management strategy.

 

Blue-Winged Wasp