Bug for bug

Beneficial insects make ideal horticulture workers.

They don’t need paychecks, time cards or coffee breaks. They don’t even complain about the August heat in a Mississippi greenhouse.

Parasitic wasps and predatory mites are just a couple of the insect species growers can release to guard against damaging pests in growing operations.

“Growers have several beneficial insects they can purchase for their greenhouses to reduce other insect populations that will damage retail plants,” said Blake Layton, entomologist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service. “This type of biocontrol may not be 100 percent effective, but it is well worth the effort.”

Layton has made regular trips to growers around Mississippi to encourage more use of biocontrol. His efforts are supported through a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

Layton said insects develop a resistance to pesticides with repetitive chemical use.

“One goal is to buy some time between insecticide applications. Resistance develops quicker with frequent applications,” he said. “Use of predatory insects also protects workers from chemical exposure.”

Whiteflies, thrips, aphids, mealybugs, leafminers and scale insects are among the tiny pests that plague ornamentals.

Nick Terkanian of Natchez Trace Greenhouses in Kosciusko, Miss., said he is a believer in biocontrol.

“I would love to make it where everything in the greenhouse is under biocontrol. It’s just God’s way of taking care of plants,” he said.

Terkanian is growing Red Missile peppers for the sole purpose of hosting swirski-mites, a predatory mite which attacks the larvae of whiteflies and thrips. He said whiteflies are among the biggest challenges in his greenhouses.

Layton assists Terkanian with scouting needs, and Layton said the biocontrol is good, but an additional benefit comes from helping growers learn how to scout for insect numbers.

“Timing is critical. The host or banker plants need to be at the right maturity stage to provide an initial home for the insects, and then there needs to be enough food, such as whiteflies or thrips, to provide nourishment,” Layton said. “Growers have a lot to learn to sustain biocontrol over a period of time, but the benefits of reducing insecticide use and reducing selection for insecticide resistance make this an attractive pest management option.”

Beginning last year, Layton was using the grant money to order insects from a company in Minnesota, which has them shipped from the Netherlands for arrival within a few days.

“The goal of this grant is to plant a seed and inspire growers to adopt biocontrol measures in their greenhouses,” he said. “This is just an introduction to the process.”

August 2015
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