Category: Lawn Pests

  • Mole Cricket Treatment for Florida Lawns

    Mole Cricket Treatment for Florida Lawns

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Mole crickets cause more damage to Florida lawns than almost any other pest. Their tunneling severs grass roots and creates raised soil ridges. Here is the treatment protocol.

    How to identify mole cricket damage

    • Raised soil ridges or tunnels visible on lawn surface.
    • Brown patches of dying grass (root damage).
    • Small mounds of soil near tunnels.
    • Most damage visible in fall (after summer breeding).

    Mole cricket species in Florida

    • Tawny mole cricket: Most damaging. Brown.
    • Southern mole cricket: Less damaging. Gray-brown.
    • Short-winged mole cricket: Native, less damage.

    Treatment strategy

    Step 1: Soap flush test

    Mix 2 tablespoons dish soap with 2 gallons water. Pour over 2-square-foot area of suspected damage. Mole crickets surface within 5 minutes if present.

    Step 2: Apply bait at correct timing

    Apply mole cricket bait (granular bait product) in late afternoon. Crickets emerge at night to feed. Best application timing is June-August when nymphs are small.

    Step 3: Spray Bifen IT in evening

    Late evening spray to lawn surface kills surfacing adult mole crickets.

    See Bifen IT →

    Step 4: Repeat 30 days later

    Mole crickets continue cycling through summer. Second treatment ensures coverage of next generation.

    Lawn health support

    • Maintain proper mowing height for grass species.
    • Water deeply 1-2 times per week.
    • Fertilize spring and fall.
    • Healthy turf recovers from cricket damage faster.

    Verdict

    For Florida lawns with mole cricket damage, time-correct bait application + Bifen IT evening spray + lawn health maintenance is the proven protocol. Best results when treatment starts in June-July when nymphs are small and easier to kill.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow safety instructions.

  • Florida Lawn Pest Control Basics — Chinch Bugs, Mole Crickets, Sod Webworms

    Florida Lawn Pest Control Basics — Chinch Bugs, Mole Crickets, Sod Webworms

    Important: Panama City Pest Control is an independent DIY information site. We are not a licensed pest control company. For severe infestations or dangerous pests, hire a Florida-licensed pest control professional. We may earn a commission when you buy through our links.

    Florida lawns face unique pest pressures — chinch bugs, mole crickets, sod webworms, fire ants, and others. Here is the DIY treatment framework for St. Augustine and Bermuda grass.

    Most common Florida lawn pests

    1. Chinch bugs (worst in St. Augustine grass)

    Tiny black bugs that suck plant juices, causing yellow patches that spread. Most active in hot dry summer.

    Treatment: Bifen LP granules to entire lawn, repeat in 30 days.

    2. Mole crickets

    Burrow in soil, push up small mounds, damage roots. Worst in Bermuda grass.

    Treatment: Bait with Mole Cricket Bait or apply Bifen IT spray during evening when crickets surface.

    3. Sod webworms

    Caterpillar larvae that chew grass blades at night. Causes brown patches.

    Treatment: Bifen IT spray to lawn at dusk.

    4. Fire ants

    Iconic Florida lawn pest. Build characteristic mounds.

    Treatment: Two-step approach — broadcast bait (AMDRO) over entire yard, then mound treatment with Taurus SC or boiling water.

    See Taurus SC →

    Universal lawn treatment with Bifen IT

    Bifen IT applied as broadcast spray (1 oz per gallon, sprayed at 1 gallon per 1,000 sq ft) controls most lawn insect pests for 30-90 days. Apply 3-4 times per year.

    See Bifen IT →

    Diagnose before treating

    Different pests cause different damage patterns. Treating chinch bug damage with mole cricket bait wastes money. Always identify the pest first via the soap flush test (squirt soapy water on damaged grass — pests come to surface).

    Lawn health basics

    • Mow at correct height (St. Augustine 3.5-4 inches, Bermuda 1-2 inches).
    • Water deeply 1-2 times per week (not daily shallow watering).
    • Fertilize spring and fall with balanced lawn food.
    • Healthy grass resists most pest pressure naturally.

    Verdict

    For Florida lawns, Bifen IT broadcast spray + targeted treatment for specific pests + maintenance fertilization is the basic protocol. Diagnose damage cause before treating to avoid wasted product. Healthy lawn = pest resistance.

    Reminder: Always read product labels and follow manufacturer safety instructions.