Damage (Blastobasis moth)

Blastobasis feeding scars to Cox fruit

Larvae feed on the flesh of apple fruits around the stalks or where fruits are touching or where fruits are in contact with leaves or branches.

  • They tie leaves and plant material together with silken webbing to make a shelter often attached to the surface of a fruit or branch.
  • Large areas of skin and flesh are removed, wounds tend to weep and becoming covered by a sticky mass of black frass.
  • They are usually surface feeders but sometimes penetrate more deeply into the flesh.
  • Crop losses can be very high, approaching 100%.
  • Larvae also feed on the bark of branches and the wounds may become infected with canker.

Other pests with which Blastobasis may be confused

Larvae of several leaf-rolling tortrix moths cause similar, though less severe damage, including larvae of the summer fruit tortrix moth, Adoxophyes orana.

  • The damage caused by Blastobasis tends to be more severe and wounds tend to weep and become contaminated with black frass and there are deeper excavations into the flesh.