Home Gardening

Pests and Diseases

Pests and diseases can make a mess of a well-maintained and beautiful garden. It’s essential to do everything you can to keep them under control. Use Penn State Extension’s extensive resources and learn about recommendations for managing garden pests and diseases, including webworms, beetles, weevils, mites, slugs, spotted lanternflies, leafminers, spiders, and aphids. Find tips on scale, root rot, viruses, and integrated pest management.

Common Garden Pests and Diseases

You might encounter a range of problems in your home garden, many of which will result from pests or diseases. Scouting your garden and recognizing the root cause of a problem means you’ll treat it more effectively.

If your cucurbits are wilting, it could be because of several diseases, including bacterial wilt, Fusarium wilt, and cucurbit yellow vine wilt. However, it could be abiotic stresses such as waterlogged soil.

The reason for there being no fruit on your trees could also be pests or diseases. On the other hand, it could be over-pruning or over-fertilization that is the cause.

Browning leaves and leaves with a pale green color in orchardgrass and timothy may indicate a fungal infection.

Pests and diseases can also affect the plants in your home. Houseplant damage can result from pests such as aphids, mealybugs, mites, scale, thrips, and whiteflies. Common diseases include anthracnose, leaf spots, and powdery mildew, as well as root and stem rots.

One insect pest that is now considered an invasive insect is the spotted lanternfly. Learn how to identify this pest, and you can help contain its spread.

Identifying Garden Pests and Diseases

There are lots of things that can make your plants unwell. Identifying the root cause and recognizing symptoms of different diseases means you’re able to make an informed treatment decision. If you want a low maintenance garden, aim to restrict your use of key plants, as these are the ones that frequently have diseases.

Common pests include:

  • Bulb crops: Onion thrips, onion maggots.
  • Leafy vegetables: Leafminers, aphids, cabbage worms.
  • Sweet corn: Corn earworms, European corn borers, fall armyworm, sap beetles, flea beetles.
  • Fruiting vegetables: Broad mites can cause severe damage to tomatoes and peppers.
  • Tomatoes: The tobacco hornworm can devour sizeable portions of tomato plantings. Another problem for tomato growers is tomato-potato late blight.
  • Strawberries: Anthracnose is caused by different species in the genus Colletotrichum
  • Grapes: Powdery mildew symptoms include cupping of leaves, scorched or brown leaves, and white, powdery patches on the upper surface of the leaves.
  • Apples and pears: Mucor rot is a fungal disease that is a problem in postharvest storage. Pears can also suffer from stony pit, which is a destructive virus that leaves the fruit looking unsightly and unmarketable.
  • Potatoes: A common problem for potato growers is early blight.
  • Trees and shrubs: A common disease with more than 75 species of trees and shrubs is fire blight.

Pesticides and Integrated Pest Management in the Home Garden

Traditionally, home gardeners would use pesticides to manage pests in their gardens and keep the landscape healthy. Commercial growers have used Integrated Pest Management for many years. More and more amateur and home gardeners are now using home, lawn, and garden integrated pest management techniques. It is a management method that seeks to limit or suppress pest populations by using various compatible tactics.

Integrated pest management tactics minimize potential harmful effects on the environment and human health. There is still a place for synthetic, natural, and organic pesticides, but generally, only as a last resort. A crucial part of IPM is scouting for common diseases, mite pests, and beneficials.

Preferred pest management tactics include encouraging beneficial insects into the garden, biological control, planting cover crops, and monitoring insect pests.

View as List Grid

Items 1-24 of 357

Sort by:
Date Posted Set Ascending Direction
  1. Leaf damage by native holly leaf miners. Photograph by Will Kuhn via iNaturalist, used under a CC BY 4.0 license.
    Articles
    Native Holly Leafminer
    Ornamental plantings of holly in Pennsylvania are often damaged by leafmining pests. The native holly leafminer only feeds on the foliage of American holly.
  2. Photo credit: Paul A. Mistretta, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
    News
    Oak Wilt Pruning Precautions
    Date Posted 8/25/2022
    Oak trees should be pruned in winter to avoid spreading oak wilt disease. Learn what steps to take if pruning becomes necessary in warmer months due to summer or fall storm damage.
  3. Tomates Cultivados en Contenedores
    Articles
    Tomates Cultivados en Contenedores
    By Tom Butzler, Maria Gorgo-Gourovitch, Thomas Maloney, Darryl Dressler
    El tomate es probablemente la hortaliza que mejor se adapta al cultivo en contenedor y que mayor fama tiene entre los productores con limitaciones de espacio, solo después de las especies de hierbas culinarias y medicinales.
  4. Home, Lawn and Garden Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
    Articles
    Home, Lawn and Garden Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
    IPM is not a practice limited to commercial and agricultural situations. It can also be used by the general public throughout our community.
  5. USDA Forest Service - Region 8 - Southern, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Responding to Pesticide Poisoning Symptoms
    Responding immediately and appropriately when pesticide exposure is suspected will help minimize the effects of exposure and, in extreme cases, may save a life.
  6. Photo credit: John A. Weidhass, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univeristy, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Not All Grubs Are Alike
    Japanese beetles spend most of their lives as grubs eating plant roots, including your lawn. But is all grub damage caused by Japanese beetles? Read on to find out.
  7. Spotted Lanternfly Management Resources
    Articles
    Spotted Lanternfly Management Resources
    By Heather L Leach
    The public can do a great deal to stop the spread of the invasive Spotted Lanternfly, join us to learn what you can do to help!
  8. Growing Gardeners: Pest Education and Poison Prevention Program
    Videos
    Growing Gardeners: Pest Education and Poison Prevention Program
    It’s important to know the differences between pests and helpful animals or insects. It’s also important to learn about poison and poison control. This series focuses on pest education and poison prevention
  9. Photo Credit: Suann Leighow
    Articles
    Diagnosing Common Problems in the Vegetable Garden
    By Suann Leighow, Nancy Knauss, Lois Miklas, Susan Marquesen
    Two-page fact sheet providing info on damage, cause, treatment, and prevention of common diseases that affect vegetables in the garden.
  10. Photo: Emelie Swackhamer, Penn State
    Articles
    Spotted Lanternfly Management and Pesticide Safety
    By Emelie Swackhamer
    Lycorma delicatula, commonly known as the spotted lanternfly (SLF), is an invasive insect pest present in Pennsylvania and some other eastern states. SLF threatens grape production, tree health and it is a nuisance in landscapes.
  11. Photo credit: Tim Elkner
    Articles
    Preventing Allium Leafminer in Garlic Plantings
    Allium leafminer targets plants in the allium, or onion-related, family. It may be especially troublesome to those who enjoy growing their own garlic.
  12. Photo credit: Natalie Hummel, Louisiana State University AgCenter on Bugwood.org
    News
    Fall Armyworm Invasion
    Date Posted 9/16/2021
    In late summer 2021, many Pennsylvania residents were surprised by turfgrass damage from fall armyworms--a pest that is usually found much farther south. Be forewarned, should they reappear.
  13. Insect damage on snap bean plant. Photo credit: Penn State Master Gardener Program
    Articles
    Steps to Controlling Insect Pests in the Garden
    By Diane Diffenderfer
    This article offers a step-by-step approach to controlling common garden insect pests using integrated pest management (IPM).
  14. Photo credit:  Penn State Extension
    Articles
    How to Create a Wildlife Barrier for a Spotted Lanternfly Sticky Band Trap
    By Emelie Swackhamer, Amy Korman, Lois Miklas
    Many residents attempt to control spotted lanternflies by placing sticky bands on tree trunks. This method of trapping should never be used without a wildlife barrier.
  15. Angular leaf spot on cucumber. Photo: Beth Gugino, Penn State
    Webinars

    Free

    Cucurbit Downy Mildew: Master Gardener Diagnostic Webinar
    When Watch Now
    Recorded Apr 15, 2021
    As part of a citizen science effort with the Master Gardener program, learn how to recognize signs and symptoms of downy mildew on cucurbits (and basil) and how you can help us in our monitoring and forecasting efforts designed to help home gardeners to commercial farmers.
  16. A native Carolina mantis eats a spotted lanternfly. Image: Heather O’Malley
    News
    Chickens, Praying Mantises Among Likely Lanternflies Enemies
    Date Posted 3/16/2021
    Photos by citizen scientists are helping entomologists at Penn State zoom in on native species that might feed on lanternflies.
  17. Photo by Heather Leach
    News
    Spotted Lanternfly Experts Debunk Myths About the Prodigious, Pestilent Pest
    Date Posted 1/22/2021
    The spotted lanternfly was discovered in Berks County in 2014. The insect has a broad host range including fruit, ornamental and woody plants and is a threat to the state's agriculture and forestry industries.
  18. A collection of tobacco hornworm. They are identified by its’ red “horn” on the back end and white diagonal markings on the side.  It can reach lengths of 4 inches and half-inch wide. Photo: Tom Butzler, Penn State
    Articles
    Hungry Caterpillars in the Garden
    By Tom Butzler
    One of the more popular books read to children is the Very Hungry Caterpillar. The story follows a large caterpillar as it eats its way through various foods as a subtle way to teach counting and an insect's life cycle, from egg to butterfly.
Page
You're currently reading page 1