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Bug of the Week is written by "The Bug Guy," Michael J. Raupp, Professor of Entomology at the University of Maryland.

Rosie defoliators: Roseslug sawfly, Endelomyia aethiops, Curled rose sawfly, Allantus cinctus, and Bristley rose sawfly, Cladius pectinicornis

 

Impressive antennae adorn this tiny adult sawfly.

 

On a recent visit to one of my favorite gardens, while enjoying the fragrances and beauty of roses, I noticed some unnerving injury, skeletonization and defoliation, on the leaves of several plants. Skeletonization is a type of injury that results when small insects use their jaws to remove soft tissues between the vascular bundles that crisscross leaves. A wide variety of beetles and caterpillars are the usual suspects when skeletonization is afoot. However, in this bed of roses, sawflies were the culprits. 

Dappled in sunshine, a pair of roseslug sawfly larvae strip nutritious tissue from the leaf blade leaving only veins and a thin layer of epidermis behind. As leaves desiccate later in summer, they crinkle and turn brown as if toasted with a blowtorch. 

It’s easy to see how the curled rose sawfly got its name.

Sawflies are unusual insects, an ancient branch of the bee and wasp clan. Unlike the larvae of bees and wasps that make their living by eating nectar and pollen or the flesh and blood of insects, the larvae of most sawflies are plant feeders. At first glance, sawfly larvae look like small caterpillars with slender bodies and distinct heads. Upon microscopic inspection, you can see that the posterior segments of the sawfly’s body bear small sucker-like appendages called prolegs. Prolegs adorn the abdominal segments of plant eating moth and butterfly larvae as well. But moth and butterfly caterpillars never bear more than five pairs of prolegs. Most sawfly larvae have six or more pairs. Another difference between these look-alikes is the presence or absence of small fishhook-like structures called crochets on the prolegs. Caterpillars have them, sawfly larvae do not. Crochets help caterpillars hold onto the smooth surface of a plant leaf. Larvae of the Roseslug sawfly were the perpetrators of the skeletonization I was seeing. 

After spending the winter as immatures in the soil beneath rose plants, in spring when foliage returns the roseslug sawfly completes its development, and small wasp-like adults fly to leaves where they deposit eggs with an egg-laying appendage called an ovipositor. The ovipositor has teeth like a saw’s blade, hence the name sawfly. Eggs hatch and the larvae proceed to pillage rose leaves through May and June. Fortunately, only one generation of these scalawags occurs each year, but in some years they may be abundant enough that by the end of June they can make roses look like they have been assaulted by a flame thrower. 

Not much left after the curled rose sawfly finishes a leaf.

In addition to skeletonization, several leaves had large chunks of leaf tissue missing from the edges of the blade. This defoliation was the handiwork of the curled rose sawfly, an insidious leaf-munching machine that is beautifully camouflaged. When not actively feeding along the margin of a rose leaf, it is curled on the underside of a leaf or on a bud where it blends in cryptically with plant. After several days of hide-and-go-eat, the entire leaf may be reduced to nothing but a mid-vein. When its development is complete, the larva bores into the twig where it pupates. Later the small wasp will emerge, mate, lay eggs and initiate a second seasonal generation. 

By mid-summer roseslug damaged leaves turn brown and crinkled.

 

In May and June, I regularly inspect my roses for the telltale signs of skeletonization and defoliation. If sawflies are common enough to create problems for my roses, I simply squish the little buggers between my fingers or pluck them off and toss them in the lawn to become a feast for the ground beetles or lightning bug larvae lurking in the thatch. Several environmentally friendly insecticides listed by the Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) with active ingredients including insecticidal soap and spinosad work well against these sawflies. OMRI listed products are used for production of fruits and vegetables marketed as organic, and when insecticide applications are necessary I try to select from the OMRI list whenever possible. As with all insecticides, always read the label carefully and follow precautions, including those safeguarding bees and other pollinators that might be on your roses. Strong directed streams of water are also reported to dislodge sawfly larvae from plants. If you have roses, be on the lookout for these rose-eating rascals.  

Acknowledgements

Two marvelous references, “Insects that feed on trees and shrubs” by W. T. Johnson and H. H. Lyon, and “Managing insects and mites on woody plants: An IPM approach” by J.A. Davidson and M. J. Raupp were consulted to prepare this episode.