Wheat stem sawfly biology & life cycle
This pest is native to North America and lives in grasses. Cultivated hosts include wheat, barley, rye and triticale. Spring wheat is probably the most heavily attacked crop. Plant age is important to the egg-laying female wasps; i.e., plants must be in the jointing (stem elongation) stage for the females to lay eggs. Females lay one egg per stem and the eggs hatch in one week. Larvae feed for two months within the stem boring through the joints. By the time wheat heads begin to ripen, the sawfly larvae have fed within the stem and burrowed down to or below ground level. In August, the larva move upward and cut through the stem about 3/4 inch above the ground, seal the end above them, spin cocoons in the stem and pass winter as larvae in diapause (hibernation). Overwintering larvae pupate within the cocoons in May, and adults emerge in June from the stubble fields and native grasses. There is one generation per year.