Crickets (Mole crickets)
Common name
Mole cricket
Scientific name
Gryllotalpa orientalis Burmeister
What it does
Mole crickets feed on seeds, tillers in mature plants, and roots. They can cut plants at the base resulting to loss of plant stand.
Why and where it occurs
Mole crickets occur in all rice environments. They are more common in non-flooded upland fields with moist soil.
In flooded rice fields, mole crickets are usually seen swimming in the water. They are also found in permanent burrows or foraging-galleries in levees or field borders. The entrances to burrows in the soil are marked by heaps of soil.
The nymphs feed on roots and damage the crops in patches.
How to identify
Check for the presence of insect and feeding damage, including:
- Loss of plant stand
- Cut seedlings at base
- Poor growth of seedlings
- Dead seedlings
- Missing plants
- Damaged roots
Damage symptoms are similar to ant damage, specifically loss of plant stand and missing plants. To confirm mole cricket infestation, check for presence of tan nymphs in tunnels on soil near the roots.
Click on images to enlarge
How to manage
To prevent
- Use resistant varieties (modern varieties with long and dense fibrous can tolerate damage better)
- Flood rice fields for for 3-4 days, level the field for better water control
- Avoid construction of a raised nursery to reduce feeding damage on seedlings
- During land preparation, collect the nymphs and adults
To control
- Maintain standing water
- Encourage biological control agents: sphecid wasp, carabid beetle, nematodes, and a fungus; mole crickets eat each other when they are together because of their cannibalistic behavior
- Poison insects by baits made by mixing moistened rice bran and insecticide and placing it along rice bunds or drier areas of the field
Learn more
View full fact sheet: Mole crickets on IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank