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Update 2025: Mysterious Eggs are Fall Armyworms

Fall armyworm egg mass

Fall armyworm egg mass on a building

In 2021, homeowners in Lancaster, Douglas and Sarpy Counties reported several to hundreds of peculiar, fuzzy egg masses laid on buildings, fence posts, and all other outdoor items. We instructed those people to wipe, scrape, scrub, or power-wash them off to prevent caterpillars from emerging. That year was considered the fall armyworm outbreak of 2021, and it was widespread from the southern US and across the entire Midwest.

This August, reports from Gage County about damage to turf and sightings of caterpillars made both horticulturists and entomologists stop and think: Are fall armyworms back? We received the email this week from the UNL East Campus Turfgrass Management Extension Educator, Amanda Folck, “we have A LOT of eggs!”

If you’ve seen several medium moths hanging around your landscape at night, they are the adults of migrating fall armyworm looking for a mate and a place to lay eggs. Several of them have been seen hiding in the turf during the day and flying about when homeowners mow.

Start looking for these signs, as well as getting down to the turf to see if you can see any of the caterpillars. These caterpillars will have a head capsule with an inverted “Y” shape and a few other characteristics.

Images courtesy of UNL Department of Entomology

Scouting

Management

Fall armyworm cannot survive the cold winters here in Nebraska, so once we get our first frost, we are clear to start planning the steps to renovate and revive the lawn for next year.

For more A Bug’s Life profiles

Helpful resources to control fall armyworm:

Clemson University compiled list of active Ingredients, as well as product brand names that may be available to homeowners. To view, click here and scroll down to “Control” section.

Purdue University had a return of fall armyworms in 2024 and have also compiled a list of active ingredients for the treatment of fall armyworms. See Table 1.

Extension Urban Entomologist at Nebraska Extension
Jody Green is the extension urban entomologist at Nebraska Extension in Douglas-Sarpy Counties. She specializes in structural, household, and health-related insect pests.
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