Diptera: Cecidomyiidae
Swede midge is an invasive insect pest from Europe and Asia that was introduced into North America in Ontario, Canada, in 2000, and then first was found in the U.S. in 2004 in New York. It quickly spread in Canada into Quebec in 2003, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan in 2007, and Prince Edward Island and Manitoba in 2008.
In the U.S., it occurs primarily in the northeast, including Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Vermont. In 2014, swede midge was captured in pheromone traps near Winkler, Manitoba, which is close to the North Dakota border (just north of Walhalla), and near the major canola production area of northeastern North Dakota.
As result of this positive detection, NDSU Extension has conducted pheromone trap surveys for swede midge in 2015, 2017 and 2018 in the major canola production areas of North Dakota. Results of the trap surveys are all negative for swede midge in North Dakota so far.
The swede midge adult is a small brown fly about 1/16 inch long with sparse venation on wings. Swede midge is difficult to identify without a microscope and taxonomic expertise because of its small size and similarity to other midges.
The antennae and wing venation of swede midge are two characteristics used for identification. Antennae of males are distinctive, consisting of 12 antennal segments, each with two beadlike “nodes” separated by more slender, stemlike connections. Larvae are cream to yellow, and only about 1/16 inch long when mature.
Hosts of the swede midge include a wide range of species within the family Brassicaceae (or Cruciferae), and include the following: canola (Brassica napus, B. rapa), broccoli (B. oleracea var. italica), cauliflower (B. oleracea var. botrytis), cabbage (B. oleracea var. capitata), radish (Raphanus sativus) and cruciferous weeds (for example, wild mustard, field pennycress, wild radish).
Swede midge overwinter as pupae in the soil of canola fields and other hosts. In the northern Plains, three overlapping generations per year are common, with the first emergence of the overwintering generation occurring in late May and peak emergence in June. The second, or summer generation, emerges mid-July to early August, and the third generation emerges during late August into early September. The complete life cycle takes from 20 to 80 days.
Adults emerge in the spring from the puparium in the soil, and only live one to five days. Females lay 15 to 50 eggs in clusters on the youngest parts of the plant, such as flower buds or leaf stalk bases. Larvae emerge from the egg after three to 10 days. Larvae feed on plant tissue for two to three weeks, then jump or drop to the ground and spin cocoons in the top ½ inch of soil for pupation. The next generation of adults, except for the overwintering generation, will emerge two weeks later.
Swede midge can cause significant yield loss to canola plants during wet, warm weather, which allows the swede midge to emerge earlier, and increases its survival and ability to produce multiple generations. Adults only feed on nectar of flowering plants and do not damage the canola plant.
However, larvae secrete salivary fluids that are toxic to the plant causing abnormal growth and brown scarring of plant tissue (for example: deformed, twisted leaves or malformed growing points on the plant), gall formation and fused flowers that produce no pods. Damage easily can be confused with mechanical damage, heat or cold stress, fertility issues or herbicide damage.
Pest Management
For early detection of swede midge in canola grown in North Dakota, growers should monitor fields with pheromone traps and report any suspicious damage to Extension agents and/or specialists. The Jackson trap and pheromone lures are available commercially for swede midge monitoring from insect trap suppliers (for example, Great Lakes IPM).
Traps are placed low, about 12 inches above the ground, and at field edges from June through maturity. Check traps at least weekly and send any suspect midge samples to NDSU Extension Entomology or the NDSU Plant Diagnostic Laboratory for identification.
Although insecticides are registered for canola, control of swede midge is problematic due to its multiple overlapping generations that could infest canola throughout the season. Insecticide applications need to focus on peak adult populations based on pheromone trap monitoring, and preventing egg laying. No trap economic threshold has been established for monitoring swede midge in canola.
A cultural control strategy is early planting to ensure the crop is growing actively and vigorously by the time adult populations peak. Fall tillage of volunteer canola and cruciferous weeds also can help reduce overwintering populations. Because swede midge is a weak flyer, planting new canola fields about ½ mile away from previously infested fields can help lower infestation levels. However, this does not work well in areas with a high density of canola fields in major production areas.
Parasitoids and predators (for example, parasitic wasps, spiders, ground beetles) that attack swede midge have been recorded in Canada and may help reduce pest populations to some extent. Dry, cool weather also can limit population growth and range expansion, whereas moist, warm weather favors its development.