Raspberry fruitworm (Byturus unicolor) prefers red and purple raspberries. Fruitworm adults limit their feeding to between the veins, skeletonizing unfolding leaves.
![Raspberry bush with developing fruit and green leaves. Some leaves have no leaf tissue in-between veins. Thin strips of leaf veins can be seen near eaten sections as the tender tissue surrounding veins was eaten first.](https://blogs.cornell.edu/berrytool/files/2020/10/raspberry-fruitworm-damaged-leaves-Heather-Faubert-2-1024x576.jpg)
Adults also feed on buds, and open flowers but the damage is usually minimal. Eggs are deposited on swollen unopened flower buds, inside buds or on developing fruit.
![Close-up of closed raspberry buds. A brown-bodied beetle is hanging upside-down on one bud; beetle is same size as raspberry bud. A single green egg is on the raspberry bud. The egg is an elongated pill shape with rounded corners and is as long as a raspberry thorn. .](https://blogs.cornell.edu/berrytool/files/2017/01/raspfrtworm2-opt-big-173id59.jpg)
Larva hatch and bore into the receptacle tissue. When harvest fruit is picked larva often remain attached to the cup-like interior of the fruit and become a contaminant to harvested berries.
![Ripe raspberry fruit with a c-shaped larva on surface. Larva is as long as one drupelet. There is a hole and tunnel burrowed into the detached receptacle, leading to the inside of the berry.](https://blogs.cornell.edu/berrytool/files/2017/01/raspfrtworm-opt-big-1u9vwtz.jpg)
More information:
- Raspberry Fruitworm – (OMAFRA)
- The Raspberry Fruitworm – (Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station)
Use these resources if you need additional help with diagnosis and to find solutions to your problem.