Runner Bug Invasion!

so lucky

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Those darned black and grey runner bugs have invaded my garden. I saw one today around noon, and by this evening they were all over the tomato plants. I grabbed the spinosad and sprayed them good. I sure hope that works on them. They can defoliate a plant faster than a horde of grasshoppers, I think.
 

thistlebloom

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I don't know what they are either, but if they're worse than the stinking grasshoppers I'll hate them with you So Lucky.
Hope you got them!
 

so lucky

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Y'all are so funny! My enemy is your enemy. Honestly, I don't know what they are. I think there was a thread on here where someone called them army bugs or something like that. Let me try to find a pic. In the meantime, the spinosad didn't do anything, so I had to dust them with rotenone, which got them. I don't like to use it, as it is toxic to bees and such, but these plants weren't blooming much where the bugs were.
 

so lucky

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Well, it looks like they are blister beetles. Why didn't I know that? The ones here are sort of grey and black, but there must be a thousand different kinds. I used to have a sweet autumn clematis, which those bugs would absolutely swarm on. I used sevin on them, and it was so fun to see them fall off the plant, roll over and die! Geeze, I sound sadistic. I am really not. :hide
 

Lavender2

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Oh I have seen those, apparently not in high enough numbers to cause a problem. I've seen the black, green, and striped beetles. Quite a catch-22 bug. They eat grasshopper larvae, but then they may take out your crop. :\

I read an article that mentioned their speedy swarm. Monitoring does not work in fields, they can go from zero to Bam!, in just hours! :eek: ... like you mentioned.

Blister Beetle - MN - oddly, I have never seen them on my iris or lupines.

Hopefully you saved your tomatoes!
 
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so lucky

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I checked this morning and couldn't find any, after a dusting of rotenone yesterday. When the horde is in full swing, it looks like the plant is shaking, from all the bugs moving. The stuff of nightmares. :ep Reminds me of how fleas get out on the ends of the hairs of a badly infested animal, when the animal dies. All the fleas are on their tippy toes, getting ready to abandon ship. Ugh! saw that on a wild rabbit once.
 
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