Tag Archives: narcissus fly

Garden Lore

“Earthworms are used by research scientists looking to improve human medical conditions because their bodies have many similarities with our own: nervous system, blood vessels, haemoglobin, kidney-like organs prgans producing urine… But don’t get too worried about the weird relations you never knew you had because worms also have five hearts and both male and female reproduction organs, they breathe through their skins and when they want to eat they stick their throats out of their mouths to grab their food. It’s going to be a while before they start moving into houses and driving cars.”

Niall EdworthyThe Curious Gardener’s Almanac” (2006)
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Narcissus Fly

Photo credit: Sandy Rae, Wiki Commons

Photo credit: Sandy Rae, Wiki Commons

Narcissi flies are on the wing now and will be laying eggs in the withering crowns of certain bulbs. Narcissi (daffodils) are a prime target but they also attack hippeastrums, snowdrops, snowflakes, hyacinths and I have seen them attack Scadoxus katherinae. Bulbs which are close to the surface are particularly vulnerable. The fly (which looks like a cross between a very small bumblebee and a blowfly) lays its eggs on the spent foliage. When the egg hatches, the larva crawls down and burrows into the bulb, eating it from the inside out.

Mark stalks them in the rockery every fine day with his little hand sprayer of Decis (a synthetic pyrethroid,the same as is in fly spray) but if you are not inclined to spend the time on the hunt (there is an element of the thrill of the chase going on here), you can take other steps. Remove the dying foliage as soon as it starts turning brown -it has fulfilled its purpose of replenishing the bulb for next season – and lay additional mulch over the bulbs to get a greater depth. If your bulbs are in containers, remove them to a shady position immediately. These varmints prefer a sunny outlook, in our experience. Dig and divide clumps which have become so congested that they are pushing themselves out of the ground and replant them so that they are fully covered. Left unchecked, narcissi fly can multiply to the point where they can decimate a patch of bulbs to the point where you will get no flowers at all.

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.

Garden lore

The moment the trees are in bud and the soil is ready to be worked, I generally come down with a crippling muscular complaint as yet unclassified by science. Suffering untold agonies, I nonetheless have myself wheeled to the side line and coach a small, gnarled man of seventy in the preparation of the seed-bed. The division of labour works out perfectly; he spades, pulverizes and rakes the ground, while I call out encouragement and dock his pay whenever he straightens up to light his pipe. The relationship is an ideal one, and I know he will never leave me as long as the chain remains fastened to his leg.

Acres and Pains by S J Perelman (1951).

The narcissi flies are on the wing

The inoffensive adult fly (photo credit: Sandy Rae via Wiki Commons)

The inoffensive adult fly (photo credit: Sandy Rae via Wiki Commons)

The Nazi flies are on the wing. That is what we call the dreaded narcissus fly here. It lays an egg in each of the leaf crowns of the bulbs. That egg hatches in to a larva which wriggles down, enters the bulb and eats it from inside out. Narcissus fly loves daffodil bulbs but also attack a range of other bulbs, including hippeastrums, snowdrops, snowflakes and, apparently, hyacinths. Mark stalks them with a little sprayer of the insecticide, Decis, which is just a synthetic pyrethroid, similar to a strong flyspray. If you are not so inclined, remove the dead and withering foliage of daffodils now and pile a few cm of soil or mulch on top. It makes it much more difficult for the fly to find the crown of the bulb. The narcissus fly resembles a baby bumble bee.

The curse of the narcissus fly

A selection of early flowering narcissi from the garden this week

A selection of early flowering narcissi from the garden this week

The offending narcissi fly larva to the right of the blade point

The offending narcissi fly larva to the right of the blade point

Behold, the narcissus fly larvae. This creamy brown grub is not your garden friend. In fact, in the world of insects, grubs and greeblies that would have been better kept out of this country, the narcissus fly ranks up the scale. It is European in origin – what they call a hoverfly though not a desirable species.

I had to look it up because I only knew it as the narcissus fly. It is Merodon equestris, in case you want to know. On the wing, the adult looks inoffensive – a bit like a cross between a lean, mean bumblebee and a blow fly boasting a yellow back. It is its reproductive habits which are the problem. The female adult zips around at great speed, laying its eggs, usually one by one, at the base of the bulb foliage. When the egg hatches, the juvenile larva burrows down and makes a cosy home for itself inside the bulb where it sustains itself by eating it from the inside out, in preparation for hatching the following spring.

You can see the damage in the photograph. As I was redoing the rose garden, I was splitting clumps of bulbs in full growth (not generally recommended but I find it works out fine as long as I am replanting straight away into good conditions). Some of the bulbs were soft and sporting very few, if any, fresh roots. That is a sure sign of narcissus fly. There is something deeply compelling about squeezing the bulb and having the larva exude out the top, or splitting the bulb and digging it out. They are quite tough so difficult to squish between your fingers (I wear gardening gloves at all times, lest you recoil at the thought) but can emit a satisfying pop and explode in a very small way if you squish them below foot. Generally, there is only one per bulb.

The inoffensive adult fly (photo credit: Sandy Rae via Wiki Commons)

The inoffensive adult fly (photo credit: Sandy Rae via Wiki Commons)

While this critter is widely referred to as the narcissus fly, by no means does it limit its predations to daffodils. It attacks many members of the amaryllidaceae family. This is a fairly large family and includes snowdrops (galanthus), snowflakes (leucojum) and hippeastrums. According to bulb expert, Terry Hatch, it also attacks hyacinths but as we only have two hyacinths, we have never noticed. As an aside, hyacinths need a winter chill to flower well so are better in colder climates.

You can’t eradicate it. The fly is airborne and does not respect boundaries. A multi pronged defensive strategy is required. The fly does not like shade, so all our hippeastrums are now woodland plants because they were getting hammered by the larvae infestations. Now they are untouched.

We favour the early flowering narcissi because they are done, dusted and pretty much dormant by the time the fly is on the wing in late spring and summer. The galanthus are also back below ground by then, so it is never a major problem with them. It doesn’t seem to be a problem with the autumn flowering bulbs such as the nerines and the belladonnas, even though, sitting half in and half out of the ground, you would think they might be vulnerable.

Don’t let your daffodil bulbs become so congested they squeeze themselves above the ground and planting them in shallow bowls may be like a creche to a passing fly. Most of the advice is to leave the foliage on the bulb until it turns yellow and dies off naturally because this is how the bulb builds up strength to flower again next season. You are not meant to tie it in knots or plait it (as some tidy gardeners do) because that inhibits the photosynthesis process. However, a visiting daffodil breeder told us that in fact the bulbs only need 65 days to fortify themselves which is a great deal less than nature gives them. The daffies in our lawn are somewhere over 100 days. This is not universally acclaimed advice but if you have a problem with bulb fly, removing the foliage soon after two months and piling extra dirt or mulch on top of the bulbs may help to break the cycle. The worst that will happen is that your bulbs won’t flower well if you strip off the leaves too early.

Come spring, Mark can be found stalking narcissus fly in our rockery. They become active in the warmth of the day. They are very quick so it is hard to get them with a fly swat. He uses a little sprayer of Decis and squirts them. Decis is a synthetic pyrethroid (as is fly spray) so not a particularly nasty insecticide. Vigilance is what keeps the flies under some semblance of control here. Though he was a little wry on the day he told me he had been walking through the rockery minus his sprayer when he saw an offending fly. It was an open garden day so he looked around to check that no visitors were within view, took off his tee shirt and was stalking the offender to swat it when he noticed the woman at the side of the garden watching. “Eye candy,” I told him. “You are now officially eye candy.”


Left to right: a perfectly healthy bulb, an infested bulb which had already formed a healthy offset, the offending larva in front, and a second infested bulb with it’s larva still ensconced (but no longer – I squished it after its photo shoot).

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.