How to Get Rid of Bagworms
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Bagworms in trees or shrubs may leave you with brown, damaged, or even dead plants. Learn how to recognize bagworms and eradicate them from your yard.
Have you noticed an inexplicable yellowing or defoliation in your shrubs and trees? A close and careful look through the branches might reveal the culprit in clever camouflage: bagworms. Devastatingly destructive, bagworms efficiently defoliate trees and shrubs by both feeding on them and using plant foliage to build their protective “bags.” Pest control specialist Kyle Morgan of Care Pest Pros in Spicewood, Texas, puts it this way: “There’s just nothing good about them.”
Should you find yourself with a bad case of bagworms, follow this thorough guide to get rid of them.
What are bagworms?
Bagworms are the larval or caterpillar stage of the bagworm moth. These larvae use plant foliage and silk from their bodies to form 1.5- to 2-inch-long, cocoon-like “bags,” and they carry their bags around with them as they voraciously forage on plant parts. These destructive insects attack many species of trees and bushes but are most often found on conifers like juniper, pine, arborvitae, cyprus, cedar, and spruce. The cases they form can be difficult to spot because they look like conifer cones.
Bagworms go through several larval stages, at the end of which the mature larvae stop eating, attach their bag to a host plant using silk from their body, and enter the pupal stage. Adult male moths emerge in the fall and fly off to find a female. Adult females never develop into moths, instead taking on a grub-like form. Females remain in their bag and release a pheromone to attract the males. After a male mates with a female (still in her bag), the female lays between 500 and 1,000 eggs. The female dies shortly thereafter, leaving her eggs to mature.
“These eggs overwinter within the protective bags and hatch in the spring, leading to the emergence of caterpillars that feed on foliage,” says Kyle Selbach, director of operations at All U Need Pest Control, which serves several counties in southwest Florida. The hatchlings spin bits of silk to catch the wind and fly off to infect new foliage, and the cycle continues.
Types of Bagworms
Worldwide, there are about 1,350 types of bagworms. In the United States, however, the most common species is the eastern bagworm (see photo, above), according to Selbach. Officially known as Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis, it’s also called the common bagworm, evergreen bagworm, common basket worm, and North American bagworm.
Other bagworms found in the United States include:
- Astala edwardsi: Primarily found in Texas and Oklahoma
- Oiketicus abbotii: Mainly impacts live oak (Quercus virginiana) trees
- O. townsendi: Desert bagworm found in the southwest United States
- Apterona helix: Non-native species often called the “snailcase bagworm” because of its snail-shaped bag
Why do I have bagworms on my property?
Bagworms can feed on trees and shrubs from more than 50 different families. And while evergreen plants are most often the victims, deciduous trees—such as apple, birch, elm, locust, maple, oak, and willow—can also host bagworms. If you have any of these host trees on your property, you may find populations of bagworms.
If a nearby tree is infected, the hatchlings might “ride the wind on their silk strands across property lines and settle in your greenery,” Morgan says. “You can also inadvertently bring them in with landscaping plants,” he adds.
Some gardeners hope for a chilly winter to kill the bugs all snug in their bags, but Selbach cautions that mild winters can dash those plans.
3 Ways to Get Rid of Bagworms
1. By Hand
If you find just a few bagworm cocoons, you may have caught the infestation early enough that you can control the situation by picking the bags off the plants by hand. As you go, just “drop them into soapy water,” Morgan says.
This will work, however, only if the larvae haven’t yet left the bags to go out to feed. Hatching generally happens in late May to early June, so do your handpicking of bagworms from late fall to early spring.
“One of my favorite ways to keep pest caterpillars, including bagworms, in check is to invite natural predators into my garden. While birds will happily munch on caterpillars, so will predatory insects like parasitic wasps and assassin bugs. To make my garden more inviting to these ‘good guy’ insects, I grow plants in the carrot family, like flowering dill and fennel, as well as yarrow, Joe Pye weed, and clover.” —Lauren Landers, Contributing Writer Tried-and-True Advice