On Nov 21, 4:25 pm, Rambling Marge
<marge1122WELOVES...@gmail.com.FORGETTHISBIT> wrote:
> Hello, everyone. I think I might have made a big mistake and I could use
> some help...
>
> About a year-and-spare-change ago I started a compost heap in a plastic
> grid composer, using mainly leaves and mowed grass. This week I finally
> dug into it, and found the compost inhabited by fat creamy-white grubs
> up to 2cm in length. I didn't think much of it and simply picked them
> out of the compost I planned to use, returning some to the composter
> and disposing of the others. Doing some research this weekend, I
> discovered to my dismay that what I'm dealing with are vine weevil
> larvae!
>
> Here's what worries me: I used the soil they produced throughout most
> of my garden, and although I'm sure I removed all the grubs before
> using the soil, I'm still worried whether there are any sneaky grubs
> eating through my plants. I'm also not quite sure whether to expect all
> the eggs are hatched; I didn't *see* anything that might have been eggs,
> but that's hardly any assurance, right?
>
> On the other hand, most of the information I've read focuses on the
> disaster the larvae make in potted plants - and I've got an outdoor
> garden, complete with a surrounding forest of Other Stuff the larvae
> can nibble on, and hopefully an array of natural enemies they can fall
> prey to. Furthermore, I've been working in this garden for nearly ten
> years now, and although I've often seen adult vine weevils lurking
> about in the summer, I've never had any problems with them, whether
> it's the adults eating the leaves, or the larvae at the roots (and this
> week is the first time I've ever actually *seen* the larvae).
>
> I've read through this tread -
http://tinyurl.com/ybg8ojt- but I'm
> still not really sure what to do. Should I start applying insecticide
> just to be safe, or wait to see if there's any damage being done? I
> repeat, I've never had problems with these larvae before, but then
> again, I've never used soil they'd frolicked about in before.
>
> And what should I do with the composter? Should I leave the larvae in
> there and pick them out before usage? (I got the impression they were
> churning out some nice compost) Or dispose of them all and good
> riddance? Is there any way of preventing them showing up again, apart
> from insecticide?
>
> Sorry about the long post - and thank you for any advice you might
> have!
>
> Cheers,
> Marge
>
> --
> Rambling Marge
I'm not sure I'd panic yet :-) First, there is no guarantee that what
you are dealing with IS vine weevil larvae -- a great many soil and
compost dwelling insects produce fat grub-like larvae, much of them
beneficial. Vine weevil larvae is also larger than what you describe,
typically 10-12 cm and with a distinctive "C" shaped curve. Personally
without a confirmed ID, I'd remove them from any compost I was
applying now and destroy and wait to see what happens in spring when
they should become active. If you DO have a problem then - and I doubt
you will - then you can apply beneficial nematodes. Nematodes need
warm soil conditions to be effective so applying now would be a waste
of product/money and may not even be necessary.
btw, an active compost operation that attains sufficient heat should
discourage vine weevil larvae - both the turning/aeration and the heat
generated will kill off any eggs that were laid that were not consumed
by other soil organisms.