Swiss Chard with Leafminers and Seed Maggot Update
Spinach and beet leafminers have been around in low numbers for the past few weeks, which is a couple of weeks ahead of schedule but have increased rapidly in the last 5-6 days. These leaf miners are found in beets, swiss chard and spinach but I usually find them more in swiss chard than spinach. Both of these leafminers are a type of blotch leafminer, creating irregularly shaped mines. These flies attack crops and weeds in the plant family Chenopodiaceae, which includes chard, beets, and spinach and the weed lamb’s quarters. Both fly species are very similar, but the spinach leafminer may also feed on Solanaceous crops such as peppers. Adults are small flies about 1/3 inch in length and gray to brown. Larvae are whitish and cone-shaped. Flies of both species overwinter as pupae in the soil. In April and May, flies emerge and lay easily seen bright white eggs in groups of 4-8 on the underside of leaves (fig. 1).