- Latin Name: Aphis fabae
- Latin Family Name: Aphididae
- Common Name: Black Bean Aphid
- Other Names: Bean aphid
Origin:
Possibly a native of North America.
Biology:
A serious pest of many agricultural crops, including beans, corn, and sugar beets, as well as a pest on numerous ornamental plants and shrubs. Populations can explode on a plant, resulting in leaf distortion, heavy production of honeydew, and potentially transmission of an injurious plant virus. Over-wintering usually occurs on ornamental shrubs such as Euonymus, with eggs hatching to a wingless generation in the spring. Females reproduce asexually for several generations, and in early summer winged forms are produced which migrate to other plants and to crops. In the fall winged males and females are produced, mating occurs, and eggs are again deposited onto plants for the winter.
Identification:
Both winged adults and non-winged adults and nymphs have black bodies and yellow legs with black tarsi, the body of the winged form being shiny and of the non-winged forms dull black. The cornicles of the nymphs are short.
Characteristics Important to Control:
Winter applications of dormant oils will kill eggs on the plants that serve as over-winter resources. A soil applied systemic insecticide can be very effective in killing the feeding aphids in the spring, or foliar applications made to infested ornamental plants during spring months.