The Scotsman

Leaf-stripping caterpilla­r tops annual list of gardeners’ most hated pests

- By EMILY BEAMENT

It was a bad year for gardeners with box plants as a caterpilla­r that strips them of leaves topped the Royal Horticultu­ral Society’s annual pests and diseases list.

The box tree caterpilla­r returned to the top of the 2017 ranking, which is based on enquiries to the RHS by gardeners seeking advice on dealing with troublesom­e pests, up from seventh place last year.

The caterpilla­r, a native of East Asia first discovered in the UK in 2011, feeds vociferous­ly on box plants under a blanket of pale fine webbing that can cover infected plants. It previously occupied the top spot in 2015.

Box plants, a particular feature of more traditiona­l formal planting and in stately home gardens, have also faced disease problems from box blight and volutella blight.

Both diseases, which cause twig and leaf death, featured in the top ten diseases in 2017, a list which was topped by honey fungus again this year.

The RHS said the box tree caterpilla­r was one of a number of new and emerging threats it was seeing queries about, along with fuchsia gall mite, alder leaf beetle and kerria twig and leaf blight.

Dr Gerard Clover, head of plant health at the RHS, said a “citizen science” scheme asking people to report cases of box tree caterpilla­r had also shown increased sightings, with 536 reports in 2016 but 3,587 in 2017. It only affects box, which is good, but it really does devastate box.

“Whole plants are defoliated, and it produces a webbing around the caterpilla­r, so it’s quite difficult to control. If you have a more formal garden still, or one of the stately homes, you’re going to have a particular problem with it, but it’s also a widely grown plant.”

He added: “This year’s pest and disease ranking points to the continuing problems inflicted on gardens by old foes like honey fungus, but also new and emerging threats like box tree caterpilla­r, fuchsia gall mite and kerria twig and leaf blight. With new pests and diseases emerging in continenta­l Europe, it has never been more important that people get to grips with what is going on in their gardens.”

 ??  ?? The caterpilla­r feeds vociferous­ly on box plants
The caterpilla­r feeds vociferous­ly on box plants

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