Bruner grasshopper (Melanoplus bruneri) adult. Photo credit: S. Barkley, Alberta Agriculture and Forestry. |
For more
information about grasshopper pests, see our Insect of the Week page!
Packard grasshopper – egg, nymph, adult
AAFC
|
Clearwinged grasshopper – egg, nymph, adult
AAFC
|
Migratory grasshopper – adult
Joseph Berger, Bugwood.org
|
Two-striped grasshopper – adult
John Gavloski, Manitoba Agriculture,
Food and Rural Development |
More information related to the Bruner grasshopper:
Specific
information about these grasshoppers, other pests and natural enemies can be
found in the updated Field Crop and Forage
Pests and their Natural enemies in Western Canada field guide.
The case of the innocuous versus the evil twin: When making pest management decisions, be sure that the suspect is actually a pest. This can be challenge since insects often mimic each other or look very similar. An insect that looks, moves and acts like a pest may in fact be a look-alike or doppelganger.
The case of the innocuous versus the evil twin: When making pest management decisions, be sure that the suspect is actually a pest. This can be challenge since insects often mimic each other or look very similar. An insect that looks, moves and acts like a pest may in fact be a look-alike or doppelganger.
Doppelgangers may be
related (e.g. same genus) or may not be related, as in the case of monarch
butterflies (Danaus plexippus) and viceroys (Limenitis achrippus).
Doppelgangers are usually relatively harmless but sometimes the
doppelganger is a pest yet their behaviour, lifecycle or hosts may be
different.
Correctly identifying a pest enables selection of the most accurate
scouting or monitoring protocol. Identification and monitoring enables the
application of economic thresholds. It also enables a producer to select and
apply the most effective control option(s) including method and timing of
application. For the rest of the growing season, the Insect of the Week
will feature insect crop pests and their doppelgangers.
Review
previously featured insects by visiting the Insect of the Week page.