Allium Leafminer
Like leek moth, this is another insect pest to be on the lookout for. While it has not been found in Maine, it was first detected in the US (PA) in 2015 and has since spread as close to Maine as New York and Massachusetts.
Pupae overwinter in soil or in plants, and emerge early in spring (350 GDD33.8). ALM adults lay eggs on allium crops, leaving a series of circles on leaves - its most recognizable sign. When larvae hatch, they mine downward toward the base of plants and pupate either in the plant or nearby soil. Adults emerge in fall, constituting the second generation. Damage from the spring generation is limited to plants with sizeable leaves at the time of emergence: chives, ramps, scallions, ornamental alliums, and garlic. Those alliums harvested before the fall (September) generation emerges are low-risk; leeks, chives, scallions, and ornamentals remain high-risk.
While the ovipositing marks can decrease quality of allium crops with marketable leaf components (chives, spring onions, ramps), the primary damage inflicted by this pest is the larval mining. Destructive in and of itself, this feeding also invites disease and pupae may remain in leaf sheaths and plant bases/bulbs.
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