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Home > Controlling Grubs & Japanese Beetles in Lexington
Japanese beetle and masked chafer adults are attracted to turf with moist soil which means they are especially attracted to lawns that get watered during hot dry spells. White grubs are the larvae stage in the Japanese beetle life-cycle. During the Japanese beetle's heavy feeding period, female beetles intermittently leave the plants, burrow about 3" into the ground— usually into turf— and lay a few eggs. This cycle is repeated until the female lays 40 — 60 eggs. Moist soils are certainly easier to dig through than hard, dry soils. Eggs will dry up and die under very dry soil conditions. The eggs also die when soil temperatures are around 90°F. Higher soil temperatures are typically associated with drier soils, as well as high air temperatures. The grubs live below ground and feed on the roots of tender grass plants that soon kills the plant. They are most destructive mid-late summer, but the damage they cause may not show up until early fall and by then, it's too late. As we enter the fall, the grubs go deeper into the soil where they hibernate through the winter months. In late spring they once again move to the surface, at which time they pupate and emerge as the adult Japanese beetle.
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ENVIRONMENTAL
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