Leaf
miners (Argyresthia cupressella) attack both arborvitae and junipers.
The miner tunnels into the growing tip and kills it. Heavy infestation
can make the entire plant look brown and dead. The adult is a moth.
It is a silvery tan and is out only in the spring and early summer.
Eggs are laid on the branch tips that are one or two years of age.
Upon hatching the larvae tunnel into the leaf scales and mines/tunnels
until winter or even the following spring. During the growing season,
little damage is noticed. Not until winter when a yellowing of the
leaf scales followed by browning is any noticeable damage visible.
The dead twigs frequently break off easily due to their dried out
condition. Once the larvae are finished feeding, they leave the
mine and spin a cocoon (pupae stage) in the dead or still living
foliage. Weeks later, adults emerge, mate and lay eggs to start
another cycle of feeding.
Control
Rarely are leafminer numbers high enough to warrant control on
arborvitae or junipers. If numbers are high, insecticides applied
in mid-spring and repeated two weeks later should be effective.