The Green Line Feedback Index

 


Ron Wolford
Extension Educator, Urban Horticulture & Environment

 

Subscription
Information

Want to know when a new issue comes out? Sign up for eNews

 

 

Bug Bites: Yellowjackets

Each season has certain insect pests associated with it. Now that we have reached late summer, one of the insect pests of the yard and garden is the yellowjacket.

Small, yellow and black "bees" flying in the backyard, around picnics, or in parks are most likely yellowjackets. Don’t confuse the name "yellowjacket" with the term often associated with the much larger bumblebees. Yellowjackets are about the size of a honeybee with yellow and black stripes and can sting repeatedly. Honeybees are brown with black stripes and a hairy body.

Yellowjackets are readily attracted to trash cans, ripe or overripe fruits and vegetables and outdoor activities involving food and soft drinks. Sanitation helps keep yellowjacket problems to a minimum. Keep food covered as long as possible when having a backyard outing.

In the garden or around fruit trees, clean up fallen or rotten produce such as apples or tomatoes that may be piling up. Alert children to the problem that often exists as wild apples or crabapples often accumulate under trees, attracting yellowjackets.

Another problem with yellowjackets is when nests are in areas frequented by people. Yellowjackets nest in the soil, under porches, in landscape timbers or in wall voids. Soil nests in problem areas may be treated with Diazinon and the hole then sealed. Apply carbaryl (Sevin) dust in and around openings to nests in other areas. As the insects come and go, they will pick up the insecticide and carry it into the nest. Do all treatments in the evening and only treat nests in problem areas.

Gray, football-shaped nests up in trees are the work of the bald-faced hornet. If at all possible, leave the nest along. It will die off with the arrival of winter and will not be reused gain next year. If the nest is in a problem area and needs to be destroyed, wait until evening and spray insecticide up into the opening (stand to one side) in the bottom of the nest. Apply ready-to-use wasp and hornet spray products.

The best advice with these types of insects is to leave them alone if at all possible. Only control them when the threat of people being stung exists, which is often the case when the nest is near homes or other structures.

Source: Bruce Spangenberg, Extension Educator, Horticulture, University of Illinois Extension

 

Autumn 2000
Gypsy Moth Alert! | All-America Flower Selections 2001 | Fall-Blooming Perennials Make Your Garden Last Year Round | Tips on How to Avoid Plant Diseases | Bug Bites: Yellowjackets | Cybergarden Sites | Hort Shorts | Hort Tips | Locally Grown: Making Chutney | Consider Using a Humidifier This Fall | Cholesterol Awareness Month | Health & Household Tips | Did You Know?

Index | Feedback

Want to know when a new issue comes out? Sign up for eNews

 

Urban Programs Resource Network Navigation Bar

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign University of Illinois Extension Annual Reports News Releases Workshops Programs Staff Offices About Extension Guestbook Environmental Stewardship All About 4-H Nutrition and Health Home and Money Just for Kids Schools Online Hort Corner Urban Programs Resource Network