Plum moth

The first plums to ripen can have a pinkish caterpillar feeding inside.

Plum moth
Plum moth

Quick facts

Common name Plum moth
Scientific name Grapholita (Cydia) funebrana
Plants affected Plums, damsons and gages
Main symptoms Pinkish white caterpillar and excrement pellets inside ripe fruits
Most active June to September

What is plum moth?

Plum moth is a moth in the family Tortcidae, there are around 400 species of moths in this family in Britain. Most cause no noticeable damage to garden plants.

Plum moth has pinkish caterpillars that feed inside the ripening fruits of plums, damsons and gages. 

Symptoms

  • Fruits with a caterpillar inside usually ripen early and are often slightly misshapen. This should not be confused with pocket plum, a fungal disease affecting plum fruits. Plum fruits will sometimes produce a clear liquid (gumming), this is thought to be a physiological response to changing water availability and not related to the presence of the moth
  • The caterpillar inside the fruit is up to 12mm long and is pale pink with a brown head
  • There will be many light brown excrement pellets near the plum stone where the caterpillar has been feeding
  • Affected fruits tend to ripen first, fruits that ripen later on the tree often have a much lower incidence of the caterpillars

A resinous gum around the stone is a physiological disorder and should not be confused with plum moth damage.

Plum sawfly Hoplocampa flava

Plum sawfly is a less frequent on plums than plum moth. The larvae tunnel into three or four fruitlets before going into the soil to pupate. Unlike plum moth whose caterpillar develop in the mature fruit, fruitlets damaged by plum sawfly fall from the tree at an early stage in June. This often goes unnoticed as overall yield is often unaffected. 

The plum cultivars ‘Czar’ and ‘Victoria’ seem to be more susceptible than others to plum sawfly.

Management

Use pheromone traps placed in May (details below), so if necessary action can be taken to avoid a damaging population. When choosing control options you can minimise harm to non-target animals by using the methods in the non-pesticide section below. Pesticide treatments are likely to kill natural enemies and are only likely to be successful if the entire plant can be reached.

 
Non-pesticide

  • Where possible tolerate the loss of some fruit to plum moth, often only a small proportion of fruits are affected. At first levels of the moth can seem high as the first fruit to ripen are those that have been affected by caterpillars
  • Encourage predators and other natural enemies in the garden such as birds, hedgehogs and ground beetles
Pheromone traps
  • Pheromone traps can be used to trap male moths. They use a synthetic version of volatile chemical (sex-pheromone) produced by female moths to lure in males
  • Pheromone traps for plum moth are available from garden shops or from some mail order suppliers biological controls. These consist either of an open-sided box or a plastic container that is hung in the tree in early May. The bottom of the box types has a sticky sheet on which the pheromone pellet is placed. Male plum moths are lured into the trap and get stuck. The plastic container contains water in which the moths drown
  • These traps alone rarely control plum moth but monitor moth activity. This can improve control by indicating if a pesticide spray is worthwhile and can help accurately time pesticide use if deemed necessary
  • On isolated trees these traps may catch enough males to reduce the females' mating success, resulting in fewer fertile eggs being laid
  • By counting the trapped males every week and following the instructions that come with the trap, the best time to spray can be calculated
  • Pheromone traps are designed to prevent birds entering the trap and getting caught on the sticky sheet, adding some bird netting will further reduce the risk of birds entering the traps
Biological control
  • A mixture of insect pathogenic nematodes (Fruit and Vegetable Protection) is available by mail order from some biological control suppliers, which may provide some control of plum moth. These are microscopic worm-like creatures that enter the bodies of caterpillars and infects them with a fatal bacterial disease. Nematodes have the potential to infect non-target animals, they should therefore be used with care and only when there is a specific problem to treat
  • The nematode should be sprayed on the trunk and branches, and also the soil under the branches, in September-October, after the caterpillars have left the fruit
  • This treatment gives no protection in the following year against female plum moths flying in from nearby gardens, and so may not be worthwhile in areas where apples and/or pears are widely grown

Pesticides

The RHS recommends that you don't use pesticides. Most pesticides (including organic types) reduce biodiversity, including natural enemies, impact soil health and have wider adverse environmental effects.
 
Where you cannot tolerate plum moth, manage them using the information above as your first course of action.
 
Pesticide treatments are likely to kill natural enemies and so reduce the likelihood of natural control and can lead to resurgence of the target animal.
 
If you do decide to use pesticides, the shorter persistence products (that are usually certified for organic growing) are likely to be less damaging to non-target wildlife.
 
The pesticides listed are legally available in the UK. This information is provided to avoid misuse of legal products and the use of unauthorised and untested products, which potentially has more serious consequences for the environment and wildlife than when products are used legally.
 
Always follow the instructions on the products. For edible plants, make sure the food plant is listed on the label and follow instructions on maximum number of applications, spray interval and harvest interval.
 
Homemade products are not recommended as they are unregulated and usually untested.
Be aware that products such as Neem oil are not registered for use in the UK and we cannot advise on their use.
 
Plants in flower must not be sprayed due to the danger to bees and other pollinating insects.

Pesticide treatment is only possible and worthwhile on small trees that can be sprayed thoroughly
  • Plum moth caterpillars can only be controlled with insecticides before they enter the fruits
  • Organic contact insecticides containing natural pyrethrins (e.g. Bug Clear Ultra 2, Neudorff Bug Free Bug and Larvae Killer) have a largely physical mode of action. These are broad spectrum so will kill a wide range of insects. These pesticides have a very short persistence and so may require reapplication to keep whitefly numbers in check. Plant oil and fatty acid products are less likely to affect larger insects like ladybirds
  • More persistent contact insecticides include the synthetic pyrethroids lambda-cyhalothrin (e.g. Resolva Bug Killer), deltamethrin (e.g. Provanto Ultimate Fruit & Vegetable Bug Killer, Provanto Sprayday Greenfly Killer) and cypermethrin (e.g. Py Bug Killer)
  • Timing of spray can be more accurately determined by the use of a pheromone trap (see above) otherwise a spray in about the third week of June, with a second application about three weeks later may have some effect. In some years, egg hatching may be earlier or later, due to the weather conditions and in years with long summers there may be two generations of the moth 
  • Further information about the use of pesticides available for management of plum moth is available on the pesticides for gardeners leaflet


Inclusion of a pesticide product does not indicate a recommendation or endorsement by RHS Gardening Advice. It is a list of products currently available to the home gardener.
 

Download

Pesticides for gardeners (pdf document)

Biology

Plum moth usually has one generation a year with adult moths emerging from late May onwards, but mostly in mid-June to mid-July. The newly hatched caterpillars tunnel into the fruits and feed around the stone until late summer. When fully fed, they emerge and overwinter inside silk cocoons spun under loose bark or other concealed places.

In warm summers, some caterpillars may pupate early and produce a second generation in late summer.

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