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Fig Beetles are green and iridescent. They lay eggs in garden soils, compost bins and lawns.

Ask Gardenerd: Grubs and Raccoons

A question came into Ask Gardenerd over the holidays: “How do I discourage the raccoons digging in my raised veggie beds?? They don’t dig on the hillside, where their efforts would be appreciated! 🙂 So far vinegar; cayenne pepper hasn’t worked! I know they are looking for grubs. I read that BT will kill the grubs, but not sure that I want to do that since (I think) the grubs may be beneficial for the soil.– Cynthia”

You’re right, those raccoons are looking for grubs. Depending on where you live, the grubs can be the larvae of Fig Beetles (in the Southwest and Mexico) or Japanese Green Beetles (in other parts of North America, but mostly east of the Mississippi). They aren’t beneficial to the garden except as an aerator. It was long believed that treatment (namely inoculating lawns with Milky Spore–a misnomer of Milky Disease) is location dependent, because often what works on Japanese Beetles doesn’t work on Fig Beetles, but this article explains that misconception. According to the Los Angeles Natural History Museum, Fig Beetles aren’t harmful at all, and they do help decompose fallen fruit. Let’s look at both insects:

Japanese Green Beetles

Notably brown and green, Japanese beetle’s lay eggs in lawns and garden soils.

Fig Beetle or June Beetle

Fig Beetles are green and iridescent. They lay eggs in garden soils, compost bins and lawns, and are much larger than Japanese beetles.

The larvae of both insects look very similar: white with translucent skin and creepy-looking legs near its mouth parts. They are usually curled into a crescent shape when you find them.

The Solution

You can put up a physical barrier to prevent raccoons from entering your garden (loosely hung deer fencing makes raccoons unable to climb over it), but it’s best to attack the problem at its source.

Since our recommendations here at Gardenerd almost always center around feeding the Soil Food Web, it comes as no surprise that the answer once again falls into that category.

Beneficial Nematodes

A bacterial-eating nematode found in Gardenerd’s compost.

There are bad nematodes (root-feeding types) and good nematodes (predator-feeding types). More than 400 different nematodes can exist in garden soils, lawns, and compost piles. Luckily, we can target a problem by inoculating soils with a specific species of nematodes.

Grub-eating nematodes are available from several sources including Gardens Alive and Arbico Organics. The more specific you can get, the better your chances of out-competing the grubs. You may need to apply several times per year, in order to catch them while they are feeding, but it’s worth being diligent.

If your beds are not covered in plants right now, dig out as many grubs as you can and leave them in a bucket overnight (they can’t climb out) for raccoons to take. Crows will eat them as well. We feed ours to our chickens as a snack. A friend calls them “chicken shrimp”.

We hope this helps you in your garden this season, Cynthia. Thanks for writing in.

This Post Has 4 Comments

  1. Ellen

    Box Turtles love to eat them!

    1. Christy

      I had no idea! Thanks for sharing, Ellen.

  2. Michele Brourman

    So the larvae of the fig beetles are not destructive? except for attracting raccoons? I’ve always dug them out of the garden and tossed them into the trash bin. And I generally find a few fig beetles in the warmer months. They’re so beautiful – always wondered what they were called.

    1. Christy

      Sources I checked said fig beetle larvae is not destructive, though Japanese beetle grubs are known to eat roots in lawns, so I don’t know if that is true of fig beetles. I will have to research that more. The fig beetles themselves will eat roses and figs and other things.

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