Common Pine Sawfly – Diprion pini
Common Pine Sawfly
Scientific Name: Diprion pini
Common Name: Common pine sawfly, conifer sawfly
Appearance: Common pine sawfly is a thick-waisted sawfly of size 8 to 10 mm. It is brown in colour with red and white marking throughout. It also has a pair of antennae and two pairs of wings with distinct veins. The larva is long and ranges in size from 18 to 25 mm.
Host Plants or Food: Common pine sawfly feeds on pine trees, especially ponderosa and pinyon pine. However, it may attack other pine trees as well as douglas fir.
Territory: Throughout North America, Eastern USA and Western USA
Mode of Damage: They are leaf chewers and feed on needles, particularly old ones. Besides, it may also feed on the bark and acts as a stem and twig damager.
Habits and Life History:
Common pine sawfly females have a sharp ovipositor like that of a saw, hence called common pine sawfly. It cuts open a slit on the needles and lays eggs in there.
The larva feeds on the outer needles; some even consume the entire needles to mature.
Once it is ready for pupation, it drops to the ground and forms a cocoon in the soil among the pine litter.
It remains dormant during the winter at one stage of its life, either in eggs or as a pupa.
It produces 1 to 4 generations per year, depending upon the geography.