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By in Consultancy on 21st Feb 2005 9:55

Unusual pest problem found in the South Downs

By David Whitaker MG MBPR


Symptoms of turf discolouration and the now familiar site of crows pecking the ground would lead one to believe that leather jackets or chafer grub were the problem, but this is not the case.

The damage is in fact due to a lesser known insect, the St Marks Fly (Biblio Marci). It is one of a group of insects often referred to as bibionid flies. They are characterised by their stout, black, hairy bodies and long legs. (males 12mm and females 14mm long).

Bibionid flies usually lay their eggs in grassland or soils high in organic matter. Eggs are laid in one cluster, between May and August resulting in isolated groups of larvae numbering over 30 at a time. Eggs hatch in late summer, and as larvae grow they feed on decaying organic matter and live plant tissue. The larvae sever the roots of grass causing reduced uptake of nutrients and water, and hence damage is often most severe on turf suffering from other forms of stress like low fertility. Turf damage becomes evident in November / December and shows as yellow patches within the turf sward.

In agriculture, some success has been achieved with insecticide treatments whilst the larvae are still small, but control becomes much more difficult later in the winter as larvae grow and migrate deeper in to the soil.



David Whitaker MG MBPR

Sports Turf Consultants UK Ltd

Tel : 01932 700609

Read more articles in Consultancy, by Dave Whitaker or from February 2005.



There is 1 comment on this article

21 Feb 2005 by Colin

I have seen this problem on some racecourses, and the St Mark's fly (Bibio marci (L.)) or the Fever fly (Dilophus febrilis (L.)), which are both Bibionids. can be damaging to turfgrass.

The following link gives greater detail, but don't be put off by the title of the paper (wheat bulb fly) as the information is as relevent to turfgrass as it is to agriculture.

http://www1.sac.ac.uk/info/External/About/publicns/TN/Tn552.pdf

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