Manitoba’s biggest crop pests of 2024

Flea beetles, cutworms, armyworms, lygus bugs and more all ate away at farm profits last year in Manitoba

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Published: February 18, 2025

A close-up of a bright green grasshopper sitting on some dirt.

Glacier FarmMedia – Manitoba had a number of pests last year that topped John Gavloski’s short list of crop insect problems.

Of those, flea beetles were once again top concern for canola, the provincial entomologist said during Manitoba Ag Days held last month in Brandon.

For other crops, top culprits included cutworms, armyworms, alfalfa weevil and grasshoppers. Lygus bugs also made their presence known, while aphids were problematic in field peas, soybeans and small grains.

Read Also

A few of the jarred product offerings that Rebekah Sandford sells from Prairie Winds Garlic Farm. Photo:

Growing garlic by the thousands in Manitoba

Grower holds a planting party day every fall as a crowd gathers to help put 28,000 plants, and sometimes more, into theground

“A lot of what happens with our insect populations is influenced very heavily by weather conditions,” Gavloski said.

“April was warmer than normal. We were … at the end of April, thinking we could be in for a lot of early seeding, early plant growth and things were looking pretty good.”

Then May and June hit. Temperatures stayed well below normal. The rain tap turned on and seemingly refused to turn off until well into summer. It wasn’t until July and August that things dried up and warmed up, with temperatures bouncing back above normal for the rest of the season.

Once that tap turned off, things swung to the other extreme. The rest of the year saw below-normal rain.

Heavy rain in June does affect insect populations, Gavloski said, as did the following heat and dryness.

Grasshoppers

The province’s weather did give Manitoba farmers a reprieve on grasshoppers, despite them still making Gavloski’s top pest list. Just-hatched grasshoppers, as small as a wheat kernel, couldn’t handle the heavy rainfall at the beginning of the growing season, he said.

“We had our populations probably reduced somewhat in some areas because of some of that moisture early on.”

That reduction showed up when he embarked on his annual grasshopper survey of field edges in August.

That doesn’t, however, mean that producers are in the clear this year.

“We had really good egg-laying conditions, so things can bounce back quickly if they get the right weather conditions,” Gavloski said.

Cutworms down

The cutworm population also declined, following a typical pattern for the insect, Gavloski said.

“They go through these cycles where they tend to build up … for a few years, they peak, and then they sort of tail off a little.”

Manitoba reached its peak for cutworms in 2019-20 and is now on the back end.

“Last year we did have some cutworm issues. There was some spraying and even a little bit of reseeding, but when you compare it to 2019-20, it wasn’t nearly to the same extent,” Gavloski said.

Insecticide was applied for cutworms

  • In canola in northwest, southwest and central Manitoba as well as the Interlake.
  • In oat fields in the Interlake region.
  • In corn fields in the eastern and Interlake regions.
  • In peas in the southwest region.
  • In soybeans in the eastern region.
  • In sunflowers in the central region.

Spring damage was bad enough in the southwest that some canola and corn needed to be reseeded.

Seed treatment not enough for flea beetles

Flea beetles also claimed canola acres again in 2024. Many canola fields seeded with neonicotinoid-treated seed still needed post-emergent insecticide, Gavloski said. In some fields, a second or even third application also took place.

Reseeding was required in parts of central and northwest Manitoba.

Gavloski pointed the finger at cooler temperatures, which he said inhibited canola growth and left stands lingering in vulnerable stages susceptible to extended flea beetle feeding.

Manitoba has had chronic flea beetle populations for a long time, he said.

“Really, what makes the big difference is how quickly your plants can get from the day you see (them) to the three-to-four leaf stage.”

Farmers can do little about temperatures, but Gavloski advised them to do everything else possible to set their crop up for quick, early-season growth.

Farmers do have some natural friends against their No. 1 canola pest. Resources from Manitoba Agriculture point to predators such as lacewing larvae, big-eyed bugs, the western damsel bug, the two-lined collops and the fall field cricket. Others, such as Microntonus vittatae, a native wasp, act as a parasite to flea beetles, but whether it makes a significant dent in canola damage is largely unknown.

Other non-chemical control measures the province suggests include direct seeding, increased seeding rate, wider row spacing and larger seeds.

Lygus bugs

Control measures for lygus bugs were reported in the eastern and Interlake regions last August . High levels were also found in canola in the northwest and central regions.

“We did have some fairly high levels last year … particularly the eastern region area around Niverville and south a little bit around that area,” Gavloski said.

Armyworms

To control armyworms, some rye fields in central Manitoba were sprayed. Armyworms were also found in small grain cereals in the Interlake and eastern regions of Manitoba. Insecticide was applied in some fields of meadow fescue, timothy and perennial ryegrass in the Interlake.

Aphids

English grain aphids were first found on May 28 last year, with bird cherry-oat aphids found almost a month later. Some small grain fields also reported high aphid levels, but those same fields also had hefty populations of their predators, such as lady beetles and lacewings.

Some producers opted for insecticide passes on oat and wheat fields in the northwestern part of the province.

Malathion and dimethoate, two active ingredients registered for aphids in small grains, both provide broad spectrum coverage, Gavloski said, but cautioned that they aren’t fail-safe options.

The 35-day pre-harvest interval for dimethoate made that option problematic for many producers, he said, and “malathion wasn’t all that available.”

That led to a lot of producers using products registered for other insects in cereals off label, Gavloski said.

It highlights a need for more chemical options against aphids in cereals, he argued, especially more selective products that will only kill aphids and not other beneficial insects.

High levels of pea aphids were found in field peas starting in the second week of July. These affected many pea crops in western, central Manitoba and the Interlake and led to widespread spraying operations through the rest of that month.

Soybean aphids were first reported on July 10 last year. There were some insecticide applications for the pest in eastern and central Manitoba in August. Those were matched by reports of increased lady beetle presence in some of those fields.

About the author

Miranda Leybourne

Miranda Leybourne

Reporter

Miranda Leybourne is a Glacier FarmMedia reporter based in Neepawa, Manitoba with eight years of journalism experience, specializing in agricultural reporting. Born in northern Ontario and raised in northern Manitoba, she brings a deep, personal understanding of rural life to her storytelling.

A graduate of Assiniboine College’s media production program, Miranda began her journalism career in 2007 as the agriculture reporter at 730 CKDM in Dauphin. After taking time off to raise her two children, she returned to the newsroom once they were in full-time elementary school. From June 2022 to May 2024, she covered the ag sector for the Brandon Sun before joining Glacier FarmMedia. Miranda has a strong interest in organic and regenerative agriculture and is passionate about reporting on sustainable farming practices. You can reach Miranda at mleybourne@farmmedia.com.

explore

Stories from our other publications