Management
Biological control
Look for the natural predators (lady beetle larvae), as noted above. In 2024, the University of Maryland Extension found that many populations of CMBS collapsed or were seriously reduced, seemingly due to natural predators. Natural predators can be supported in your landscape by avoiding or limiting the use of pesticides and providing a variety of flowering plants which provide food resources to these beneficial insects at different life stages.
Refer to our general scale management recommendations for further information.
Chemical control
As a last resort, if pesticides are warranted, a combination of dormant oil applications and the use of systemic or growth-regulating insecticides is the most effective approach. For large populations, scale suppression may require more than one year of intervention, and professional pesticide applicators will be needed to apply certain treatments. Mature trees should be evaluated by a certified arborist.
The unknown details for crawler emergence periods for this species means that monitoring and treatment need to occur several times a year to be effective. If you do not wish to use pesticides and are not obtaining good control from manual removal efforts alone, remove and replace the infested plants.
Introduction to Scale Insects
Details for monitoring and pesticide use timing
Just before the expected emergence period for each generation, start monitoring for crawlers. Since weather trends can shift date ranges, a more reliable prediction of timing can be made using Growing Degree Days and Plant Phenological Indicators.
Clemson University reports that southern states predict to see a peak of first-generation crawler activity around 646 degree days.
More information regarding degree days and plant phenological indicators is not yet available for this species in the mid-Atlantic.