How to Identify Corn Earworms

The biggest identifier for gardeners is that corn earworms are a soft-bodied, mostly smooth caterpillar on our corn plants. They can be found on tassels and whorls earlier in the growing season and are usually on corn ears in late summer, as the silks have browned and the ears have started to form.

Corn earworm larvae

The larvae of corn earworms (the actual worm we’re concerned about) go through six instars, or stages, on their way from newly hatched to ready to pupate. The first couple of stages are small, creamy white, and the later stages get larger and darker colored. The last instar is about 1.5-2 inches long, and can be several colors, including black, dark green, or even red and pink. They have several lateral lines running down their backs. 

Corn earworm eggs

Corn earworm eggs are very small, about the same width as a single strand of silk on an ear of corn. They are creamy yellow, round, and laid singly, not in groups, most often on the silk.  

Corn earworm adult moths

The corn earworm moth looks rather nondescript to me, sort of tan and dusty colored. If you said light-brown moth, these are what I’d picture. 

Adults typically have a wingspan of about 1.5 inches. Think of a moth the size of a postage stamp when it is sitting with its wings folded. Like many moths, they are most active at night. 

Corn earworm feeding on a corn cob
The adult corn earworm moth lays eggs on corn plants.

What Corn Earworm Damage Looks Like

Early-season corn earworm damage may be found as feeding holes on leaves, tassels, and the whorl, but in late summer, it’s the ears that are the problem. Corn plants can handle a few holes in the leaves, but when they start chewing on our ears of tasty, sweet corn, that’s the problem for gardeners. Damage to the whorl (the tight spiral of forming leaves at the top of a young corn plant) will look like leaves peppered with holes as they unfurl.

Later in the season, corn earworm larvae feed on the silks, then work their way down into the ear and begin feeding on the kernels, often devouring the top 1-2 inches of the ear. Not only will they eat several rows of kernels, but you’ll likely find excessive amounts of worm frass (insect droppings) near the tip of the ears. Corn earworm larvae will keep feeding until they mature, then drop off the plant into the soil to pupate (become moths).

Fortunately, if you can get past the ick factor of finding a worm in your ear of corn, or the signs of their past presence, the rest of the untouched corn on that cob is still fine to eat. Just cut off the damaged tip. 

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