Protect Your Tomatoes From Hornworms This Season

If the leaves of your tomato plant seem to suddenly be disappearing, take a closer look. There is a good chance there are one or more hornworms feeding on your plant. Left unchecked, hornworms can quickly devour tomato leaves and even defoliate plants. Their green color provides a perfect camouflage – as a result, hornworms, which can grow up to 3” long, often aren’t noticed until they get quite large.

What Are Hornworms?

Hornworms are the caterpillar stage of sphinx moths. They get their name from the harmless spine, or horn, found on their back end. There are several different species of hornworms found in our region, two of which feed on tomato plants: the tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) and the tomato hornworm (Manduca quinquemaculata).
Tobacco hornworm resting on a tomato plant leaf, with text indicating it also feeds on tomato plants. Image by Charlotte Glen.

Tobacco vs. Tomato Hornworms

These closely related insects look very similar and both turn into medium-sized brown moths. In the caterpillar stage, the color of the horn can help you tell the difference – tobacco hornworms have red horns while the horn on a tomato hornworm is blue. To learn how to tell the difference between these two species, watch the
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How to Control Hornworms in Your Garden

Determining which type of hornworm is eating your tomato plant is not necessary to decide what you should do about them. Both hornworms are voracious feeders that should be removed from tomato plants as soon as they are found. If left to eat their fill, hornworms can kill young plants and weaken larger plants, resulting in reduced fruit production. We can have two or three generations of hornworms over the summer, so be sure to check your plants frequently for new caterpillars.
Tobacco hornworm feeding on a ripening tomato, with image credit to Joe Boggs, OSU Extension.
Hornworms can feed directly on tomato fruit as well as leaves. Photo by Joe Boggs, OSU Extension.

Handpicking Method

If you only have a few plants, checking your plants regularly and picking the caterpillars off by hand is an effective way to control them. You can drown the caterpillars in a bucket of soapy water or feed them to the chickens.

Organic and Conventional Insecticides

If handpicking is not feasible, there are several organic insecticides that control caterpillars, if applied when the caterpillars are small. Examples include products that contain Spinosad or B.t (Bacillus thuringiensis).  Other common garden insecticides that contain pyrethroid class chemicals (bifenthrin, zeta cypermethrin, etc.) can also be used.

Apply Insecticides Safely

When applying any pesticide, including organics, be sure to read and follow all label directions. Apply insecticides late in the evening, when bees are not active, to minimize harm to pollinators.

Beneficial Insects That Help Control Hornworms

If you happen to find a hornworm that looks as if white cigars are growing out of its back, leave it in the garden. The “cigars” are actually the cocoons of braconid wasps. These tiny, non-stinging wasps parasitize hornworm caterpillars and help to naturally control their populations. Other beneficial insects that help control caterpillars in the garden include assassin bugs, spiders, and predatory wasps such as yellow jackets and paper wasps.
Hornworm with numerous white braconid wasp cocoons attached to its back, perched on a plant stem.
Leave parasitized hornworms in the garden—braconid wasps help naturally control pest populations.

Learn More About Tomato Insects

If you would like to learn more about hornworms and other tomato insects, then visit the Clemson Insect note “Tomato Insect Pests”. You can also contact Daniel Simpson at 252-745-4121 or daniel_simpson@ncsu.edu to discuss these insects and other tomato related issues.