These insects tunnel through soil and different species affect different parts of the country.
Lawn destroying insects.
Most people choose not to use toxic insecticides on lawns because children and pets use the area which is often bordered by edible plants.
These lawn destroying insects attack turfgrass by sucking on grass blades.
Ant colonies give us clear signals of their presence by building unsightly mounds in your lawn.
A lawn destroying insect in the midwest or the east typically reproduces just once a season.
Insects can suck nutrients from the grass destroy roots and eventually kill the lawn.
While indulging on your grass blades the sap sucking insect exudes the chemical anticoagulant.
The japanese beetle is an invasive species similar to the june bug that can damage not only your yard but your trees and shrubs as well.
One of the most common lawn destroying insects is also one of the easiest to spot.
As they burrow through soil mole crickets feast on insects and decaying plant matter along with grass roots and shoots.
The beetle s larvae feed on the roots of your grass in the spring and in fall.
Anticoagulant cause your lawn to stop absorbing water leading to your grass wilting and dying.
And if you see one ant mound you can bet more are on the way.
Some insects may prove harmful for people such as disease carrying mosquitoes and ticks.
But the range of temperatures created by the combination of both high and low deserts means lawn destroying insects will breed all summer long.
Ants in the plants.
Mole crickets are one of the most devastating lawn pests throughout the southeast.
Chinch bugs are small red and black insects with white markings on their back.