Farms.com Home   News

Rindworms: A “Complex” Pest Of Melons

By Matt Lollar, Jackson County Horticulture Agent
 
It’s the beginning of melon harvest season in the Panhandle, and rindworms pose a significant threat to fruit quality. Rindworms are an interesting bunch because they are made up of a number of caterpillar species that fall under the classification of the “rindworm complex”. Any moth larva found feeding on the surface of a melon is considered a rindworm.
 
 
Rindworm damage on watermelon.
 
Rindworm damage on watermelon.
 
 
Larva of a beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Hubner).  Photograph by John Capinera, University of Florida.
 
Larva of a beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Hubner). 
 
Beet armyworm and cabbage looper are the most common rind feeders in Florida, but cutworms, tobacco budworms, corn earworms, and other armyworms can also be found feeding on the outside of melons. Cabbage looper larvae are green with white stripes that run the lengthwise down their bodies. They are called loopers because they arch their back and drag their hind legs to move, similar to an inchworm. Beet armyworm larvae are dull green, have thin stripes down their backs, and have wider stripes down their sides.
 
 
Larva of cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni (Hubner). Credit: University of Florida
 
Larva of cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni (Hubner).
 
Although caterpillars feed on stems and foliage, they cause much more economic damage by feeding on melon rinds. Their feeding causes light-colored blotches on the rind, which makes the fruit less marketable. Scouting for rindworms is difficult and damage is oftentimes not noticed until harvest. With this fact in mind, it is important to select insecticides with short pre-harvest intervals (PHI).
 
Lollar Corrected Table
 

Trending Video

It’s Time To Simplify Your Grain Marketing

Video: It’s Time To Simplify Your Grain Marketing

Ag commodity marketing is too complex, largely misunderstood, and the industry is full of products and services you probably don’t even need to profitably market your grain. That truth bomb — along with many more — is courtesy of Joe Vaclavik of Standard Grain. Mr. Vaclavik, a former grain trader turned commodity marketing commentator, says there are only three things a farmer needs to be profitable. Conversely, there are nine things almost no farmer EVER needs to use, including options trading, long range weather prognosticators, and exotic grain marketing contracts. Joe keeps it simple. And blunt. If you’re thin-skinned, don’t tune into this episode. For the rest of you in Ag, enjoy!