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Flies - Leaf and Stem Miners

General recommendations. Adult leafminers are minute larvae of black flies and some wasps and moths that damage a number of flowering plants and vegetables. They lay eggs on the undersides of leaves. Upon emerging, they tunnel into the leaves between the upper and lower surfaces to feed on the inner part. Affected foliage will look discolored or diseased. Leaves will show light green to brown serpentine mines or tunnels between the lower and upper leaf surfaces, in which dark specks of excrement and/or tiny maggots may also be visible. A few weeks after the infestation begins, affected leaves may turn completely brown or yellow, look blistered or curled, or collapse. Besides damaging leaves, leafminers can damage stems below the soil, and also carry black leg and soft rot diseases. Several generations develop each summer.

Flowering plants susceptible to damage by leafminers include chrysanthemum, columbine, delphinium, hollyhock, larkspur, nasturtium and verbena. Vulnerable vegetables include beans (lima and snap), beets, cabbage, chard, lettuce, peppers, radishes, spinach and turnips. To prevent damage, check the undersides of the leaves of vulnerable plants for telltale rows of small, chalky white eggs, then scrape them off and destroy them. Repeat weekly for three to four weeks. If leafminer damage occurs, pick off and destroy all infested leaves, pruning back stems until only uninfested growth remains. Repel larvae by spraying plants with several weekly applications of insecticidal soap in late June and early July. If leafminers are a recurring problem, consider covering vulnerable plants in the spring with floating row covers, like Reemay.

Leafminers overwinter in the soil and emerge in early spring, and their chances of survival are reduced with a thorough fall cleanup. Remove weeds, especially lamb's-quarters. Cultivate soil in the late fall to expose these insects to birds and other predators. Wait to lay down a winter mulch until after the ground has frozen solid. Do not compost soil or plant material that may be infested.

The larvae of a number of sawfly species also mine the leaves and stems of a variety of plants. For more information on these pests, see Sawflies - Borers and Miners, above.

Images: Click on image to enlarge or on underlined captions for more information.

Tunneling damage in holly (Ilex) leaf caused by holly leafminer, a fly maggot (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

Damage to inkberry holly (Ilex glabra) caused by holly leafminer, a fly maggot (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

Holly leafminer maggot (Diptera) between layers of leaf tissue on inkberry holly (Ilex glabra)
High resolution image available.

Holly leafminer maggot (Diptera) inside leaf of inkberry holly (Ilex glabra)
High resolution image available.

Leafminer (Diptera) on hollyhock (Alcea)
High resolution image available.

Leafminers (Diptera) do not prevent plants, such as, this hollyhock (Alcea), from blooming
High resolution image available.

A maggot (Diptera) hidden beneath the flower sheath of this iris (Iris) may be responsible for flower buds failing to open; it was also infested with aphids (Hemiptera)
High resolution image available.

Tthis maggot (Diptera) may be responsible for bud blast on iris; it was hidden in the flower sheath
High resolution image available.

Serpentine tunnelling of a leafminer on a honeysuckle leaf (Lonicera); this leafminer is a fly larva or maggot (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

Close-up of leafminer (Diptera) on honeysuckle (Lonicera); note eggs (brown, globular structures) and tunnelling larvae or maggots
High resolution image available.

Brown blotches and puckering on boxwood leaves (Buxus) caused by boxwood leafminer (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

Blistered, puckered tissue on the underside of these boxwood leaves (Buxus) due to boxwood leafminer (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

The lower leaf surface of boxwood (Buxus) removed to reveal the leafminer maggots (Diptera)
High resolution image available.

Underside of boxwood leaves (Buxus) shortly after the emergence of boxwood leafminers (Diptera). Note that some of the emergence holes have the pupal cases sticking out.
High resolution image available.

Underside of boxwood leaves (Buxus) shortly after the emergence of boxwood leafminers (Diptera). Note that some of the emergence holes have the pupal cases sticking out.
High resolution image available.

Close-up of pupal cases of boxwood leafminers (Diptera) sticking out of the emergence holes on the underside of boxwood leaves (Buxus).
High resolution image available.

Empty pupal cases of boxwood leafminers (Diptera) that fell off a boxwood (Buxus)
High resolution image available.

The adult boxwood leafminer is a fly (Diptera) that recently emerged from its pupal case inside a boxwood leaf (Buxus).
High resolution image available.

Damage to boxwood (Buxus) caused by boxwood leafminer (Diptera), a fly maggot; early stage
High resolution image available.

Boxwood leafminer (Diptera), a fly maggot, exposed in the tunnel it has eaten between the layers of a boxwood (Buxus) leaf
High resolution image available.

Close-up of boxwood leafminer (Diptera), a fly maggot, exposed in the tunnel it has eaten between the layers of a boxwood (Buxus) leaf
High resolution image available.

Damage to boxwood (Buxus) caused by boxwood leafminer (Diptera), a fly maggot; later stage
High resolution image available.

Boxwood leafminer (Diptera) swarming above boxwood (Buxus)
High resolution image available.

Boxwood leafminers are gnats (Diptera) which swarm in the spring, usually around the time that weigela bloom, before laying eggs in the new growth on boxwood (Buxus)
High resolution image available.

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