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Luring Beneficial Insects to Your Garden
by Kate Worfolk
Create a garden that is friendly to beneficial insects
and let nature control the pests that eat your cabbages and roses.
Worried that miniature monsters like aphids, hornworms or
corn borers will chomp a swath through your carefully planted garden this
year? These insect pests can be the organic gardener’s worst enemy. But
not all insects are harmful. In fact, so-called beneficial insects can
help you fight the nasty ones. So nurture a balanced, biologically diverse
environment in your garden and let nature help you with pest control.
The use of insects to suppress other insects dates back at least to the fourth
century A.D. when ants were manipulated to control citrus pests in China.
Aphids, worms and caterpillars, spider mites, thrips, greenhouse
whiteflies, flies, mealybugs, sweet potato whiteflies, mosquitoes, fire
ants, grasshoppers and broadmites can all be controlled in this manner.
There are basically two categories of insects used to control other
insects – predators and parasites. Insect predators like the praying
mantis and ladybug feed directly on their prey, killing them immediately.
They are generally larger than their prey and must eats lots of prey to
grow. Other, smaller and weaker, insects like wasps and flies parasitize
their hosts by depositing eggs on or in them, eventually killing them by
using the host for food.
There are two ways to get beneficial insects into
your garden. You can lure them there naturally or you can introduce
purchased ones. If you are unable to attract beneficial insects into your
yard, or you are dealing with a specific pest or you are gardening in an
enclosed area such as a greenhouse, purchasing and releasing some
beneficial insects may be the best plan. Suppliers ship by mail and can
recommend specific solutions that are beyond the broad scope of this
article.
Otherwise, make sure your garden is friendly to beneficial
insects. Insects need water and shelter. A birdbath or simple dish or pan
filled with pebbles so the insects won’t drown will provide drinking
water for a variety of insects. Change the water in containers every few
days to discourage mosquitoes from breeding in the standing water. Provide
areas of stable habitat, some rocks and grass pathways, and leave some
leaf litter and debris under shrubs to provide beneficial insects with a
place to and other disturbances. Do not use zapper lights that electrocute
insects because they may kill more beneficial insects than pests.
Like
pests, beneficial insects need food. So grow a variety of plants to
support a variety of insects. As a general rule, beneficial insects like
tiny flowers that offer both pollen and nectar. And since the appetites of
friendly insects may peak before your garden does, try to have an early
bloomer ready so the beneficial insects can feed on nectar and pollen.
Small flowering plants provide the best source of nectar for hungry
beneficial insects. These include many herbs, particularly umbelliferous
flowering types as the floral heads are actually many small flowers held
together. A few of the best herbs include dill, coriander, sweet fennel,
caraway, lovage, angelica, parsley, tansy and mint. Sweet alyssum is also
good, as are daisies.
Probably the best plant to have growing in your own
garden or in the neighborhood is Queen Anne’s lace. The flat white
umbelliferous flowers are the favorite food of a predator wasp which feeds
on many of the harmful insects, including Japanese beetle grubs.
Another
group of plants that provide valuable food for beneficial insects are the
flowers of garden vegetables, such as the floral heads of broccoli,
lettuce and numerous other cool crops. So if you want to attract
beneficial insects, leave a few plants to fully bolt and produce flowers
for early summer beneficial insects.
As for which bugs are helpful, here
are some of the main ones you should consider attracting or acquiring.
Many species of ladybird beetle have an enormous appetite for aphids,
mealybugs and mites. Ladybug larvae are equally relentless predators.
Attract ladybugs to your garden by planting pollen-rich plants like
angelica, dill, lemon balm, caraway and catnip.
Lightning bugs (Lampyrids)
and Soldier Beetles (Cantharidae) are excellent predators of soft bodied
insects like aphids. Soldier beetles especially like pollen from
goldenrod, yarrow, Queen Anne’s lace and other fall flowers.
When
praying mantis are small, they are excellent soft-bodied insect predators.
But as they get bigger, they begin to eat anything that passes in front of
them including other beneficial insects, like honeybees.
Aphids, small
caterpillars and other soft-bodied insects can be caught quite effectively
by the larvae of common lacewings (C. carnea and C. rufilabris), which
look like miniature monsters when viewed under magnification.
The lowly
ground beetle (Carabidae), so common under logs and debris, is another
good friend of gardeners. Both larvae and adults are predaceous and feed
on a wide variety of insects.
Parasitic flies (Tachnidae), which are
commonly found in houses during early spring, lay eggs on caterpillars and
adult beetles. These large, hairy flies are recognizable because their
wings protrude at a 45-degree angle.
Trichogramma wasps (minutum and
pretiosum) are tiny but useful parasites, especially for caterpillar
control. Some popular hosts include the eggs of the: gypsy moth, codling
moth, tomato hornworm, cabbage looper, imported cabbage worm and European
corn borer.
Attracting these friendly bugs to your garden will not totally alleviate
infestations, but should remove enough pests to keep your plants thriving.
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