How to deal with a wireworm on potatoes

Potatoes are an unpretentious vegetable crop, which is easy to grow and does not require specific knowledge. Unfortunately, the whole idyll is disturbed by pests - insects that eat potatoes and spoil its tubers and greens. The struggle with the wireworm among gardeners is in second place after the "battles" with the Colorado potato beetle. And, if the Colorado potato beetle shows itself well outwardly - its adults, larvae and eggs are on the surface and dot the green part of the bush, then the wireworm lurks underground and does not give out its presence in any way. You can find out that the potato tubers are affected only after digging up the potatoes - and this is already too late.

How to protect your garden from a secret pestHow to rid a potato site of a wireworm so as to cause minimal damage to plantings and soil - this will be an article about this.

Wireworm in potatoes

The notorious potato pest is the larva of the click beetle. The larva looks like a small worm, up to three centimeters long, it is colored yellow, orange or brown.

Attention! A characteristic feature of the wireworm is a very hard shell that is difficult to crush even with a hard object.

The pest imago is a black beetle with an elongated body, the length of which can reach five centimeters. The nutcracker got its name due to the characteristic sound that it makes when trying to roll over from its back onto its abdomen.

The life cycle of click beetles is 3-5 years. The adults hibernate in the ground, where they flee from frost. With the first warmth (usually in April), the beetles crawl out to the surface, and their females begin to lay eggs - oval white granules with a diameter of about 1.5 mm.

In one season, the female can lay up to a hundred eggs - clickers are quite fertile. After a while, small larvae appear from the eggs - in the first year of life, such wireworms do no harm to either potatoes or other cultivated plantings.... And already from the second year of life, the larva actively spoils potatoes, roots and tubers of other garden crops, cereals and perennial grasses.

To develop the correct tactics for getting rid of the wireworm in potatoes, you need to know the features and "habits" of this pest:

  1. The adults and larvae of the nutcracker love high humidity and shade. That is why wireworms rush to the potato field - they do not have enough moisture, the lack of which they replenish along with the pulp of the potato.
  2. The beetle hibernates, as well as its larva at a depth of 15-20 cm. If individuals or their eggs are above the ground in the autumn-winter period, they will die.
  3. Nutcracker eggs need shade and moisture, the sun is destructive for them.
  4. For several years in a row, wireworms can eat only one type of food, the larvae get used to the new food badly - during this period, up to 90% of the individuals die.
  5. The favorite and natural food of the larvae is the roots of young shoots. weedy grasses - creeping wheatgrass.
  6. Dense undergrowth and soil entangled with plant roots are attractive to the wireworm.
  7. The pest loves acidic soils.

Knowing these features of the pest, you can easily draw up a plan to combat it. But it should be remembered that the most effective are complex measures to combat the wireworm.

Wireworm-damaged potatoes are dotted with multiple moves of complex shape (shown in the photo below). Such potatoes are very difficult to peel and cut, removing damaged areas, so most often they are simply thrown away.

All this has a bad effect on the presentation and quality of the potatoes. In addition A wireworm gnawed through the flesh of a potato is an "open wound" through which infections, fungal spores or rot can easily penetrate. Affected tubers often disappear shortly after pest exposure.

Important! Potato yield in a wireworm infested field can be reduced by 50-60%.

And the worst thing is that next year the larvae will continue their "activity" and will harm the new crop of potatoes.

How to deal with a wireworm on potatoes

For many years, gardeners and farmers have been fighting this pest, so today the most effective wireworm remedies... Gardeners protect their fields in different ways, but all events can be roughly divided into four groups:

  1. Agrotechnical ways to save the harvest.
  2. Chemical methods for controlling larvae on potatoes.
  3. Luring out the larvae with baits and traps.
  4. Folk (or safe) remedies.

How to get the wireworm out, which method is better to use, must be decided depending on the complexity of the infection, as well as taking into account the area of ​​the site planted with potatoes.

Agrotechnical measures

Some agrotechnical techniques developed taking into account the characteristics and lifestyle of this pest will help to destroy most of the larvae and adults on potatoes.

So, to remove the annoying wireworm from the potato field will help:

  • Late autumn plowing land on a plot with potatoes. This should be done not earlier than the end of October, when the first frosts have already begun and severe frosts are already coming. The earth is dug up or plowed to a depth of at least 25 cm, trying to turn over each layer of soil. So you can kill most of the adults and larvae that have sunk deep into the soil for wintering - they will simply freeze out.
  • In the spring, a vegetable garden or field is dug up again, now you can not go deeply, since the target is the eggs of the nutcracker, which are 50-10 cm from the surface. A suitable period for such an event is May, when the sun will already be baking well. Eggs with larvae will die. Along the way, you can remove the roots of wheatgrass and other weeds - adult wireworms can accumulate there. It is better to burn the grass.
  • Generally, moist soils are highly acidic, which is a suitable environment for wireworms. It is easy to find out about the acidity of the soil in the area with potatoes, you need to inspect the weeds growing there. Horse sorrel, plantain, mint and horsetail grow where it is damp and the earth is sour. Reducing the acidity can make the potato field unattractive to the wireworm. This can be done in several ways, the traditional one is the introduction of fluff lime into the soil. It should be remembered that this method can also harm potatoes, causing scab on the tubers. More gentle methods: dolomite flour, chalk, wood ash, crushed egg shells.
  • You need to clean the area with potatoes regularly and very carefully.... In the spring, all last year's grass, tops and greens must be collected and burned, because under the dry grass, female clickers most often lay their eggs. Throughout the season, you need to pull out the weeds, trying to pull the entire root out of the ground. Do not leave torn or weeded weeds next to the potatoes - they should be taken away from the garden and, better, burned.
  • It has been noticed that the constant cultivation of potatoes in one place not only depletes the soil, but also leads to a manifold increase in wireworm individuals. The wireworm cannot switch to a new food in one year, therefore compliance with crop rotation in planting potatoes is especially important... It is best to do this: divide the site into 3-4 zones and sow one of the parts with another crop every year, and the rest of the area with potatoes. In turn, such areas change places - potatoes grow in place of green manure and so on.You can use both green manure, such as vetch, mustard, rapeseed, and crops that yield crops (legumes, corn, buckwheat). Crop rotation helps to improve the health of the soil, saturate it with biological nitrogen, and increase the yield of potatoes. And also, in a few seasons, you can completely cope with the wireworm.
  • During dry periods, wireworms eat potatoes even more intensely, as they need moisture. Watering the potatoes more often can help reduce the number of damaged tubers.
  • If weeds grow on the border with the garden, you need to separate it with several rows of lettuce. Wireworms will move from the weeds to the potato, but they will encounter more succulent lettuce roots along the way and will remain there until the end of the season.
Advice! For greater efficiency, it is better to deoxidize the soil under the potatoes with ash from burnt stems of a sunflower, potato tops - this will be especially unpleasant for a wireworm.

Chemical fight

The most aggressive measures for controlling wireworm on potatoes are insecticides and the use of mineral additives. If you compare, then a more gentle way is to fertilize potatoes with nitrogen and ammonia, you can use:

  • ammonium sulfate;
  • ammonium chloride;
  • ammonium nitrate.
Important! Preparations containing ammonia must be embedded in the ground, because wireworms cannot tolerate the pungent smell of ammonia, and on the surface it quickly evaporates.

Insecticides are used both for treating potato tubers before planting, and at all stages of culture development. The most effective drugs for wireworm:

  1. "Aktara" is used when sowing potatoes, it is one hundred percent effective - the wireworm does not touch the treated potato bushes.
  2. Prestige also refers to insecticides applied to potato tubers prior to planting.
  3. Bazudin is recommended to be used only when other anti-wireworm agents are ineffective. The drug is a real poison not only for the wireworm, but also for humans and mammals. Therefore, you can process only those potatoes that have not yet set the tubers.

If possible, it is better to postpone the treatment of potatoes with insecticides and try to cope with the wireworm with biological agents. The essence of the action of such drugs is based on the fact that in nature every living creature has an enemy. For the wireworm, such a natural enemy is carnivorous nematode - a microscopic worm that enters the wireworm's body and eats it from the inside.

Attention! For earthworms, animals, birds, as well as for humans, this particular nematode is absolutely harmless.

The biological agent must be applied to the soil in which the potatoes grow. It is best to do this locally - in each hole before laying the tubers. Biological products are sold in the form of a suspension ("Nemabakt") or as part of a special soil ("Protection").

Traps and baits

Compared to other means of combating wireworm on potatoes, such methods are the least effective, but they are safe and do not require material investments. In a small area with potatoes, traps can really cope with the wireworm, destroying up to 80% of the individuals.

You can lure a wireworm, given its "culinary" addictions and cravings for warm, humid places:

  • after harvesting potatoes, heaps of tops, straw or manure are left, and on a frosty day they turn them over - the wireworms accumulated in a warm place die.
  • In the spring, such traps can be dug in or covered with foil. After a couple of days, dig up with the wireworms and burn.
  • In May or early June, cereals or corn are sown between the rows of potatoes, throwing a handful of seeds into the hole. After a couple of weeks, the cereals will sprout, their delicate roots will attract the wireworm - the pest can be removed simply by digging up the bait plants.
  • Pieces of potatoes, carrots, beets are strung on a stick and dropped into the ground.The next day, the baits can be removed and the wireworms removed from them, and then placed back in the ground.

Advice! For greater efficiency, feed baits or cereal seeds are recommended to be soaked in insecticides such as "Decis". Then the wireworm will die only after having tasted the "treats".

Folk remedies

The attack in the form of a wireworm, destroying the planting of potatoes and other crops, has been known for a long time. During this time, the people learned to deal with the pest and developed several effective tactics:

  1. During planting, half a liter of pink potassium permanganate is poured into each hole under the potatoes.
  2. Potato tubers are treated with dark purple potassium permanganate before planting - the wireworm will not eat such potatoes.
  3. Potatoes are watered with infusion of field herbs such as nettle, dandelion, celandine, coltsfoot.
  4. A handful of onion husks are placed in each hole with potatoes - neither wireworms nor Colorado beetles can tolerate the smell of rotting onions.
  5. Since autumn, pine or spruce needles are added to the potato plot - the wireworm does not like the smell of needles.
  6. Marigolds can be planted between the rows of potatoes.

Advice! Poultry can be used to control wireworms on potatoes. For example, laying hens can eat tough worms, thus replenishing their diet with nutritious protein.

Outcomes

How to get rid of the wireworm in potatoes, each gardener decides for himself. Experienced farmers recommend postponing the use of toxic drugs and trying other, safer methods.

For those who are engaged in the cultivation of natural products, only a biological method is available and the installation of baits, traps, because even such gardeners do not use mineral fertilizers for their potatoes.

In any case, do not forget about agrotechnical methods, because their effectiveness has been proven by years of practice and clean yields of beautiful potatoes, without moves and damage.

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