Canna leaf rollers
Pale green caterpillars 1 to 1.5 inches long with a yellow-brown head, hidden inside the tightly rolled new leaf at the top of the canna stalk. The moth lays eggs in the unfurling leaf, and the caterpillar stitches the edges together with silk as it feeds inside.
New leaves never unfurl, stay rolled like cigars, and unfold into ragged shredded strips with rectangular holes punched in rows. Heavy infestations defoliate the plant within weeks and stop flower spikes before they emerge. The Lesser canna leaf roller is the dominant species across the southeast and Gulf Coast.
Bt spray into the new leaf cones, weekly
Mix one teaspoon Bt (Monterey BT or Safer Caterpillar Killer, about fifteen dollars) per quart of water in a spray bottle.
Spray directly into the top of each new rolled leaf at dusk, getting the solution deep into the cone where the caterpillar feeds.
Reapply every 7 days from late spring through early autumn. Bt only kills caterpillars actively chewing, so keep up the schedule to catch each new hatch.
Cut and destroy heavily rolled leaves
For tightly rolled leaves that already show damage, snip the entire leaf at the base and drop it into a sealed bag for the trash, not the compost. This removes both the caterpillar and the silk-stitched egg sites in one motion. The canna will push fresh new growth from the rhizome within 2 weeks.