🔬 LIFE CYCLE

Wireworm (Click Beetle Larva) Life Cycle

Agriotes spp. · Coleoptera: Elateridae

Wireworms spend 2-6 years as soil-dwelling larvae — the longest larval period of any common crop pest. This extended underground development explains why infestations persist despite annual treatment.

🔄 Stages

🥚Egg
🐛Larva
🫘Pupa
🪲Adult (Click Beetle)
🥚
Egg
Laid in Soil with Organic Matter
Adult click beetles lay eggs in spring in soil with high organic content. Prefer moist clay-loam soils. Hatch in 3-4 weeks.
🐛
Larva
2-6 Years in Soil
Yellow-brown, wire-like, hard-bodied larva. Multiple instars over 2-6 years total — the longest larval period of any common crop pest. Moves up and down in soil column with temperature and moisture.
🫘
Pupa
3-4 Weeks in Soil
Pupation occurs 4-8 inches deep. Non-feeding stage in an earthen cell. Adults emerge in late summer but may overwinter without emerging.
🪲
Adult (Click Beetle)
1-2 Years as Adult
Adult click beetles are long-lived — 1-2 years. They lay eggs each spring, producing continuous overlapping generations in heavily infested soils.

🔬 Key Facts

🎯Sampling method: Potato bait at 4-6 inch depth — count wireworms per bait after 48 hours. More than 1 per bait suggests treatment threshold in potatoes.
🌱Crop preference: Corn, potatoes, carrots, and other root crops are most vulnerable. Cereal crops less so.
🔄Generational overlap: Multiple year classes present simultaneously — a 'clean' year doesn't mean wireworms are gone from the soil

📅 Season

Adults emerge and mate in spring. Larvae present year-round but most damaging when soil warms in spring (move upward) and when planting coincides with larval activity.

⏰ Treatment Window

At-planting soil insecticide (bifenthrin or chlorpyrifos applied in furrow) provides protection during the vulnerable seedling period. Crop rotation to non-host crops (soybeans, alfalfa) reduces wireworm populations over 2-3 years.

✅ Target the most vulnerable stage for best results.

🎯 Life Cycle Stage × Treatment Effectiveness

Understanding life cycle stages allows you to target the most vulnerable period and plan follow-up treatments to catch individuals that survived as eggs or pupae.

StageDurationTreatment Approach
Egg/PupaVariableOften resistant to insecticides. Target adults and larvae while preventing egg-laying.
Larva/NymphVariableOften the most susceptible stage to IGRs and targeted treatments.
AdultVariablePrimary treatment target. Elimination of adults stops reproduction.

⏰ Why Timing and Follow-Up Matter

Most treatment failures happen because of two mistakes: treating only once, and treating only the visible population. Life cycles mean there are always individuals in a pesticide-resistant stage (eggs, pupae, or protected cases) that will emerge after your first treatment.

💡 Key principle: You're not treating today's population — you're breaking the reproductive cycle.

❓ Life Cycle FAQ

How does knowing the life cycle help me treat this pest?
Life cycle knowledge tells you which stages are present and which are vulnerable. Treating when only adults are present misses eggs that will hatch in days. Timing treatments to coincide with the vulnerable stages — and planning follow-ups for resistant stages — dramatically improves outcomes.
Why do pests come back even after a thorough treatment?
Eggs, pupae, and protected life stages (like cockroach egg cases) are resistant to most insecticides. They hatch or emerge after treatment and rebuild the population. The solution is scheduled follow-up treatments timed to catch each new cohort as it becomes vulnerable.
How long does a complete life cycle take?
Cycle duration varies by species and temperature — warmer temperatures accelerate all stages. At typical indoor temperatures (70°F), most common household pest cycles complete in 4–12 weeks. This is why 6-week treatment protocols are the standard minimum for most infestations.
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026