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No gardener wants to see insects wreaking havoc on a garden bed, whether a plant or vegetable garden. It’s natural to want to protect your gardens and get rid of garden pests. Unfortunately, one of the most severe issues you will face is the fight with pests.
However, it is no time for overzealousness! Care must be balanced with beneficial insects. Braconid wasps are great for controlling tomato hornworms, and ladybugs eat aphids. Together, both these articles will give you a good foundation on insects and insect management for your garden.
To get healthy and vigorous plants in your garden, supply the soil with necessary nutrients, oxygen, enough water, and root support. Only healthy soil can help plants overcome pest attacks. Try these ways to build healthy soil:
The secret is in diversity. You should encourage natural pests’ enemies to your garden and help you eliminate these horrible creatures. The best strategies which will help you control pest populations as much as possible:
If possible, try to water your garden early in the morning. That way you will:
From time to time, closely monitor your plants and be prepared to take timely action if you notice any pest damage. In the case that the pests are not widespread, you may decide not to take action to avoid killing beneficial predators.
If you notice that pests have already caused massive damage, you should begin to use appropriate control methods:
The essential thing is that they need to be entirely non-toxic to beneficial insects you want to attract, as well as to humans, our pets, and the rest of the wildlife. Without any concern, you can use Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), Spinosad, and milky spore powder.
If you have sticky leaves, here are solutions to treat sticky leaves.
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Botanical Insecticide | Use Against |
Neem | caterpillars, gypsy moth, leaf miner |
loopers, mealybug, thrips, whitefly | |
Nicotine Sulfate | aphids, spider mites |
thrips and other sucking insects | |
Pyrethrum | aphid, cabbageworm, flea beetle, flies |
harlequin bug, leafhopper, Mexican bean beetle | |
spider mite, squash bug | |
Rotenone | aphid, cabbage worm, carpenter ant |
Colorado potato beetle, cucumber beetle, flea beetle, fleas | |
Japanese beetle, loopers | |
Mexican bean beetle, mites, spittlebug | |
Ryania | aphid, codling moth, corn earworm |
oriental fruit moth, thrips | |
Sabadilla | armyworm, blister beetle, cabbage looper |
cucumber beetle, harlequin bug | |
leafhopper, stink bug |
Chemical solutions – Sometimes you are forced to try (organic) pesticides and just can’t avoid them. If you must use them, try to pick out the less toxic ones and always read the directions on the label before applying them. Avoid those that are not approved by the USDA and choose to start with the least toxic.
Over 4,000 species of these tiny, soft, sap-sucking, pear-shaped vegetable garden pests live throughout the world. When you start gardening, you can expect these creatures cause a catastrophe in your garden including encouraging growing mold on leaves, sucking nutrients out of the greenery, and spreading various viruses. They usually attack lettuce, tomatoes, cabbage, and kale.
You will hardly identify them without knowing all the details about the species in your region and current life-stage. They can be green, gray, yellow, red, black, or brown and have two variations (winged and non-winged types). On the other hand, they are widespread and multiply very quickly, so probably every your plant suffer from their presence.
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Read a full article on how to get rid of aphids.
Probably everyone adores butterflies, but the caterpillars of some species such as giant swallowtail and cabbage white will destroy your flowers, vegetables, and most of the fruit by chewing on leaves along their margins.
These small green segmented worms are soft, but with a hard head capsule. However, keep in mind that some of these ugly creatures (110,000 different species) will become beautiful butterflies which will deter pests out of your garden.
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These fat, gray or brown larvae of night-flying moths are a highly destructive pest which can devastate your vegetable garden, especially tomatoes, kale, cabbage, and broccoli. Although adults can be gray, yellow, green, and brown, and hard to identify, you will easily identify and locate their C-shape curled larvae on the surface of the soil. As their name said, cutworms chew the tissue of the seedlings and cut them.
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This vegetable garden pest destroys many types of beans and soy. Both light yellow larvae and adults of these insects damage leaves, but copper-colored adults (with exactly sixteen black spots) additionally feed on blossoms, stems, and pods.
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You will quickly recognize these metallic blue-green beetles in your garden that destroy leaves and flowers. Their grubs (larvae) are fat and white, with a brown head. Expect them to eat the roots of your herbs. The huge problem with beetles is that they release pheromones, chemicals that attract other insects.
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Unfortunately, more than 1,000 of 8,000 existing species of these insects live in North America. You can find them on the trees and shrubs in your backyard, but they also affect houseplants and greenhouse plants as well.
Whether it’s about bumps-looking females, small, flying males, or tiny, soft larvae that crawl on leaves, they all suck plant sap and cause foliage to drop off.
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These small caterpillars are probably one of the most destructive pests you can find in your vegetable garden. They prefer cruciferous plants such as cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, collard greens, and kohlrabi, but they also attack spinach, cucumbers, tomato, potato, and lettuce. The adults are gray, with a typical white or silver letter ‘Y’ on the forewings. Their smooth and green pupae have thin white strips on their backs, and they crawl in a looping motion.
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These green, olive, or brown jumping insects with red or yellow marks are one of the toughest insect pests to fight off. They spend a day chewing leaves and escaping their enemies, including flies, the most dangerous creatures for them. These flies lay eggs near the eggs of a grasshopper which are food for their newborns.
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Since that those little, soft-bodied, white, flying bugs are often well-camouflaged, you can’t easily notice them in your garden. Adults make clusters on the lower side of tomatoes, sweet potatoes, or peppers’ leaves where they suck juices and produce honeydew, a sticky substance that causes a fungal disease on leaves.
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These large, green, striped caterpillars feed on tomato and tobacco plants. Tomato and tobacco hornworms are well camouflaged, but you can spot them easily because they are large and leave dark droppings on leaves. Their adults are large moths with gray or brown wings.
There is a greater possibility to have problems with tobacco hornworms if you live in the South, while tomato hornworms are more represented in the North. Except for tomato and tobacco, they also damage potato, eggplant, and pepper leaves.
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Generally, you don’t need to think about the adult forms of these bugs because these flies are harmless to plants’ foliage. The problem represents green or brown larvae which feed on the tissue of spinach, beets, chard, blueberries, and nasturtiums.
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I have to admit that I hate those horrible yellow-orange creatures with black stripes on their wings that once devastated my garden. You can find them on potatoes, eggplant, tomatoes, and petunias throughout the US and expect them to kill your plants and reduce yields.
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Adult bugs are bright yellow with stripes or spots, which depend on their species. They affect cucumbers, melons, squashes, pumpkins, and gourds by transmitting bacterial wilt and making small holes in the foliage and flowers.
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These tiny black vegetable garden pests can cause considerable problems to your radishes, potatoes, corns, tomatoes, and eggplants by making round holes in the leaves. Plus, their larvae feed on plant roots.
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These small white moth’s caterpillars usually create colonies that can quickly ruin your garden in autumn. The cycle starts when the moths lay eggs on the underside of foliage. In most cases, they choose pecan, willow, alder, walnut, as well as apple, peach, maple, and pear trees for that purpose.
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Surprisingly, sawflies are little wasps, but they are not beneficial insects. On the contrary, adult forms lay eggs on leaves, and their worm-like larvae feed on them. After forming clusters, they destroy foliage of trees and surrounding shrubs.
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There are big chances that you will spot these insects in your vegetable garden. Unfortunately, it is extremely tough to control this dark brown bugs that suck juices from leaves of cucumbers, squashes, zucchini, pumpkins, and melons.
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A common tendency might be to get rid of spiders. But the general advice is, don’t. They are usually beneficial and do not harm plants.
Perhaps the biggest benefit of garden spiders is that they eat insects. They are on your “unwanted insect team!” They feed on mostly unwanted pests that you don’t want in your flower beds, like aphids, wasps, beetles, mosquitoes, and flies. On the other hand, don’t let them overrun your garden, but it will very rarely get to that point.
These tiny, spider-related pests feed on plant juices and leave behind fine, silk webs on the foliage.
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Slugs are slimy, gray, orange, brown, or mottled soft-bodied mollusks without shells and legs that leave slime trace behind. You can expect them to feed on various vegetables and plants in your garden. They chew plant tissue and can cause complete defoliation of plants, especially young ones. On the other side, snails are the shelled gastropods that live at all continents. Adults have a hard, coiled outer, protective shell to hide in when they are in danger. They represent not only garden pests, but also food for people.
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Peter Weeks, Founder of the Daily Gardener
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