Removed sod to expand my garden, found these guys inside. Friend or foe?

by rsae_majoris

17 Comments

  1. rsae_majoris

    For context, I had squash vine borer last year…

  2. chamgireum_

    They eat plants but other (beneficial) things eat them so

  3. windycityzow

    Put them on display so birds can feed and the circle of life continues

  4. Not_signing_up

    Free snacks for birds or your chickens if you have some

  5. Tjoseph415

    Things will dig up your garden looking for those. Try using beneficial nematodes to get rid of them

  6. Just_Like_That28

    To be or not to be…. Grubs under the grass and I don’t know what they become. I have similar visitors and kind of curse then ignore. We don’t have vine borers that I know of but do have “squash bugs” almost every year and they are vexing by themselves. Cursing alone doesn’t help. I will follow this to see what others offer for suggestions.

  7. RobfromHB

    If their population gets too heavy they’ll munch roots of favorable plants. If it starts getting past a half dozen per SF it can be an issue, but if it’s just a few I wouldn’t  worry.

    Once they get pretty plump, which can be different times of year depending on climate, they stop eating and pupate to become beetles.

  8. ipovogel

    Beetle grubs pretty much all look basically identical. Differentiating between native and invasive, ones that turn into beetles that eat garden pests and ones that eat your young plant roots, ones that primarily feed on decaying matter and ones that primarily feed on living matter… basically an impossible task for the average gardener. If I run into them while digging, I feed them to my pet lizards or the wild lizards/birds. If I don’t run into them, they don’t exist. My garden has more than enough predators to keep them in check.

  9. aReelProblem

    I’ve always let me chickens have free reign of my garden beds a couple times a year. They clear out any creepy crawlies and lizards they see for a few days and they turn and fertilize while they’re at it. I find these in my compost piles every year and about the time one of my birds sees me digging in the pile and they spot one it’s game on. They’ll move a mountain of compost looking for these.

  10. BocaHydro

    beetles or moths

    generally they eat decaying wood or roots, have a 1y life cycle and fly out

  11. Immediate-Tooth-2174

    I usually collect them, put them in a bowl for the birds.

  12. Illustrious_Bid_7003

    They all go to my flat feeder for the birds.