European Pine Sawfly
Sawflies are non-stinging wasps that have their ovipositor serrated like a saw. It is used in making slits in the plant. Eggs are then deposited in the slit. These insects attack pines. The sawfly larvae feed on the foliage in the spring. At first the small larvae eat only the outer layer of the needles. As they grow larger, the entire needle is eaten. After four weeks the sawflies fall to the ground to spin a cocoon. There is one generation per year. Mice (eat the pupae) and diseases often cause the populations of this sawfly to crash. The European pine sawfly"waves" in mass as a means of scaring off predators.They feed on older mature leaves, leaving the emerging needles alone.
James E. Schuster, retired Extension Specialist, Horticulture & Plant Pathology and Dr. Philip L. Nixon, Extension Entomologist, Dept. of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois