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Importance - Deodar weevil (also called eastern pine weevil) adults and larvae can kill terminal and lateral branches, as well as girdle the stems of small trees. The weevil also vectors the pitch canker fungus, and its feeding wounds are infection courts for the pathogen. The weevil is found throughout the South and Mid Atlantic states. It attacks deodar and Atlas cedar, cedar of Lebanon, and various southern pines.
Identifying the Insect - Adult weevils are rusty red to grayish brown, have long snouts, and are about 1/4 inch (6 mm) long. The larvae are legless grubs, with a reddishbrown head. The life stages of the Deodar weevil are similar in appearance to those of the white pine weevil. Where their geographic ranges overlap, identification of the pest is usually based on the host species and the portion of the tree infested.
Identifying the Injury - During the fall, weevil larvae feed on the inner bark of leaders, lateral branches, and stems of small trees. Infestations usually remain unnoticed until the following January, when infested branches begin to turn brown. Small trees may be girdled and killed.
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Adult. Photo by Gerald Lenhard
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