Armored Scales Milwaukee WI

This armored scale (Unaspis euonymi) from Asia is a serious pest of euonymus throughout the United States and Canada, particularly the Japanese euonymus (Euonymus japonicus) and European euonymus (E europaeus), although it also attacks American bittersweet (Celastrus scandens), Japanese pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis), Paxistima canbyi, and other plants.

Local Companies

Stein Garden & Gifts
(414) 362-7878
8801 W Brown Deer Rd
Milwaukee, WI
Minors Garden Center
(414) 354-4886
7777 N 76th St
Milwaukee, WI
Weber's Flowers
(414) 264-6280
4215 N Green Bay Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Tiger Lilly Garden Center
(414) 384-7995
1559 W Forest Home Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Plant Land
(414) 768-0126
6204 S Howell Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Don's Flower Shop
(414) 671-1611
1314 W Wilbur Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Advance Landscape Center
(414) 483-0299
5970 S Howell Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Batzler's Garden Center
(414) 354-9749
8762 N Granville Rd
Milwaukee, WI
Sweetbush Incorporated
(414) 384-7995
1559 W Forest Home Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Holtz Landscaping & Garden Center
(414) 461-9442
8500 W Silver Spring Dr
Milwaukee, WI

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This armored scale (Unaspis euonymi) from Asia is a serious pest of euonymus throughout the United States and Canada, particularly the Japanese euonymus (Euonymus japonicus) and European euonymus (E europaeus), although it also attacks American bittersweet (Celastrus scandens), Japanese pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis), Paxistima canbyi, and other plants.


BIOLOGY: Fertilized females overwinter on the stems and leaves of host plants. In early spring, when new leaves emerge, they lay yellow elliptical eggs and die. The eggs hatch over a two- to three-week period. The young scales, or crawlers, which look like specks of yellow-orange dust, travel along the stems and leaves of the host plant or are windblown. They eventually settle down, inserting their long, needlelike mouthparts into plant tissues to suck sap, and they develop a waxy protective covering. The gray to brown, oystershell-shaped females are typically found on stems, while the fuzzy, white, elongate males are typically found on foliage. They reach adulthood within 40 to 60 days. Males mate with the immobile females to produce a second generation. Generally, there are two generations per year in the northern and central areas of the United States, and three or more in southern areas.


SYMPTOMS: Yellowish or whitish spots or halos on the upper surface of the leaves are caused by feeding males. The females can often be seen clustered on petioles and stems. Leaves of infested plants yellow and drop prematurely, often leaving tufts of foliage at the ends of stunted branches. Heavy infestations lead to plant death. Like other armored scales, euonymus scale does not excrete honeydew.


CONTROL: Apply horticultural oils to dormant shrubs in late fall or early spring, when temperatures will remain above freezing until the spray dries. During the growing season, apply horticultural oil or insecticidal soap when the mobile crawlers are present and when they have recently settled. To determine when crawlers are active, attach double-sided sticky tape to twigs or branches and examine the tape with a hand lens for the presence of yellow-orange crawlers. Change the tape at weekly intervals. Alternatively, shake a branch over a white sheet of paper and look for moving orange specks. Certain systemic insecticides may help to reduce the population of these pests, and several natural predators have been introduced. In 1984, the Agricultural Research Service (USDA/APHIS) imported and established two Korean predatory beetles, Chilocorus kuwanae and Cybocephalus nipponicus in the eastern United States. 

From Horticulture Magazine

Featured Local Company

CLC Christiansen Landscape Construction

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8N140 Sunvale Dr
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