Skip to main content
Menu
Get Involved
Give
Contact
Ask Extension
About
Leadership
UMD Extension Impact
Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Respect
Careers
Directory
Program and Organizational Development
Statewide Extension Advisory Council
Resources
Animal Agriculture
Plant Agriculture
Yard & Garden
Pests
Natural Resources
Environment & Energy
Agribusiness Management
Food & Nutrition
Health & Well-Being
4-H & Youth Education
Programs
4-H Youth Development
Family & Consumer Sciences
Agriculture & Food Systems
Environment & Natural Resources
Home & Garden Information Center
Locations
Publications
News & Events
All News
Events
Seedling Problems
Home
Resources
Seedling Problems
For full functionality of this site it is necessary to enable JavaScript. Here are
instructions for how to enable JavaScript in your web browser
.
Sort by:
Date
Title
Updated: November 16, 2023
Will University of Maryland Extension help me with my cannabis plant questions?
The University of Maryland Extension statement on advising for commercial or backyard cannabis growers.
Updated: September 13, 2021
Seed Maggots Very Active in Our Area on Early Planted Vegetables
The unusually warm winter and early spring we have had up to now has allowed large populations of seed and root maggots to invade our vegetable fields. Some farms have been hit particularly hard in their onion, bean, pea or radish crops this season by maggots. These maggots include seedcorn maggot Delia platura (SCM), onion maggot Delia antiqua (OM) and cabbage maggot Delia radicum (CM). All three species overwinter in the soil as a maggot inside a brown pupal case (fig. 1). In March and April small, grayish-brown flies (fig. 2) emerge, which are usually SCM or CM, OM flies usually peak 2-3 weeks later. Adult flies are most active from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. and are inactive at night, in strong winds or when temperatures are below 50o F or above 80o F. Adults live 2-4 weeks and females lay hundreds of eggs.