Real Estate

Why leatherjackets are bad news for your lawn and what you can do about them


It’s that time of the year. Daddy long legs are starting to arrive in your house.

The bugs may be a minor irritant in the home, but when they lay their eggs in your grass that can be more of a problem.

This is because the larvae, known as leatherjackets because of their tough, leathery skin, feed underground on stems and roots, which can cause bare patches to appear in your lawn, or attract wildlife such as birds to peck at them, while badgers and moles will cause more lawn damage foraging for them.

There are around 350 species of cranefly in Britain. Adults emerge and lay eggs on the turf from August to October which will hatch a few weeks later, which is when the grubs start to feed on the roots, going under the surface.

A leatherjacket on a leaf (Alamy/PA)

A leatherjacket on a leaf (Alamy/PA)

“At that stage they are very hungry and depending on the population in your lawn, between November and January or February, you will see either bits of grass dying off in your lawn or birds pecking at it,” says lawn expert David Hedges-Gower, author and chairman of the Lawn Association.

If it’s cold they will overwinter as small larvae and won’t do a lot of damage until mid-summer, but in a mild winter they will continue to feed and can become big enough to cause lawn problems by late winter.

A cranefly

A cranefly

Leatherjackets are often more prevalent after a wet autumn, as damp conditions favour survival of eggs and larvae, according to the Royal Horticultural Society.

Badgers and moles sense movement in the ground and will dig away at your lawn to investigate.

How do you know if you have leatherjackets?

The easiest way to tell if you have an infestation is to find a grub. They have elongated tubular bodies and can grow up to 30mm, with no obvious head or legs and can be brown or black in colour.

To encourage them out of the lawn, saturate the grass and cover it with black sacks or tarpaulin overnight.

In the morning, the grubs will have risen to the surface and will be easy to see. They can be discarded by picking them off by hand or leaving them exposed for hungry birds.

So, is there anything gardeners can do to minimise the damage the grubs can do and deter their predators from digging up the lawn?

1. Promote movement

Craneflies and their larvae don’t like movement or human noise or machinery sounds, says Hedges-Gower, so it might be worth running a mower at its highest setting over your lawn when possible, to deter them.

2. Get rid of thatch

“They lay their eggs just below the surface, sometimes in the thatch. They like undisturbed ground, so places where there’s been no real effort made on the grass. Lawns with a lot of thatch are likely to have more of them,” warns Hedges-Gower.

3. Use different lawn seed

“Rye grass doesn’t have many plants per square metre, so if you have an attack on a rye grass lawn that is already thinning out during winter – which it does – it doesn’t take much for a small leatherjacket infestation to wipe out a rye grass lawn because you’ve literally got a few thousand plants in a square metre, whereas in a traditional lawn (he recommends bent and fescue grass seed), you’ll have 20,000 plants. So an infestation in a natural native lawn probably goes unnoticed,” he explains.

4. Try nematodes

These biological controls are microscopic colourless worms found naturally in the soil where they hunt down and attack pests, targeting only their prey. They usually come in a powder form to buy and are diluted with water in a watering can and then poured over the affected area. They are most effective when applied at particular times of the year, when soil conditions are right for them to survive, which for leatherjackets is usually from September to early October.

However, Hedges-Gower has reservations about how effective nematodes may be in an uncontrolled environment like the garden, compared with, say, greenhouse conditions.

“A live nematode needs a certain amount of moisture, but not too much, and a certain temperature, not too hot or too cold. They say, wash them in, but you don’t know how far the spread of the grub is. You have to apply them at a certain time.

“When people see daddy long legs flying around, they get the nematodes out, put them on and there’s nothing there to kill. The eggs haven’t even hatched. The application should be done when the larvae have hatched, which is November time, but November’s too cold. The soil’s too cold.”

4. Consider distractions

Birds, badgers, moles and other wildlife will forage for the grubs in your lawn, pecking and digging to extract the larvae, which generally happens over winter through to spring, when food is more scarce and there is less human traffic in the garden.

”A lot of the time the birds sense the movement in the ground and will start pecking for the grubs,” says Hedges-Gower. “They do more of the damage than the grubs themselves, sometimes. Crows, magpies, rooks and starlings will peck small holes in your lawn.”

Badgers will dig up great clumps of lawn to get at the grubs.

He suggests trying traditional bird deterrents like CD cases hanging on a line around the lawn, or netting, anything really that would interfere with the insects re-laying eggs or stop creatures foraging for grubs under the grass.

5. Wait till spring to repair the lawn

“If your lawn is thin it will be sticky and claggy and very cold, so you’ll never germinate anything. Clean up the mess as best you can and prepare for February, March and April time,” he advises.





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