Beneficial and Pest Insects: The Good, the Bad, and the Hungry: The Hungry Garden, #3
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About this ebook
Book 3 of the Hungry Garden series talks about the other hungry species dwelling in your garden – insects! Whether they're eating your plants – or eating the insects that are eating your plants – insects are fascinating to learn about, even the garden-wreckers.
Learn to observe what lives on your roses, what's laying eggs on the underside of your tomato leaves, and what insects are lying in ambush for pests. This book will help you tell the helpful bugs from the harmful ones, and walk you through ways to encourage beneficial insects while discouraging the pests and helping you to limit pest damage.
This volume covers a plethora of beneficial insects, including damselflies, lacewings, ladybugs, wheel bugs and assassin bugs, praying mantis, big-eyed bugs, wasps, cicada killers, and leaf-cutter bees. It also has a rouge's gallery of pest insects: mealybugs, whiteflies, scale, stink bugs, fungus gnats, flea beetles, tomato hornworms, aphids, spotted cucumber beetles, spider mites, thrips, Japanese beetles, squash bugs, grasshoppers, and emerald ash borers. We also have ways you can control pests without harmful chemicals and sprays, and ways to attract your insect friends, create a habitat for beneficial insects, and make them happy in your garden.
Beneficial and Pest Insects is a little handy-dandy manual that walks you through the pest insects that might be in your garden and the
beneficial insects that you would like to see more of. Focusing on a plant-positive approach – in which the health of the plants is considered over the random eradication of random insects – this book is a naturalist's/gardener's look at the fascinating and busy world of insects in the garden.
Rosefiend Cordell
This is the gardening pen name for Melinda R. Cordell. Former city horticulturist, rose garden potentate, greenhouse manager, perennials factotum, landscape designer, and small-time naturalist. I've been working in horticulture in one way or another since 1989. These days I write gardening books because my body makes cartoon noises when I move, and I really like air-conditioning. Good times!
Read more from Rosefiend Cordell
The Hungry Garden
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Titles in the series (5)
Big Yields, Little Pots: Container Gardening for Creative Gardeners: The Hungry Garden, #1 Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Edible Landscaping: Foodscaping and Permaculture for Urban Gardeners: The Hungry Garden, #2 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBeneficial and Pest Insects: The Good, the Bad, and the Hungry: The Hungry Garden, #3 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsIndoor Gardening: Growing Herbs, Greens, & Vegetables Under Lights: The Hungry Garden, #4 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGrowing a Food Forest – Trees, Shrubs, & Perennials That’ll Feed Ya!: The Hungry Garden, #5 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Beneficial and Pest Insects - Rosefiend Cordell
A Quick Overview of the Insects in This Book
And the Order They Belong To
––––––––
Odonota
Dragonflies and damselflies
Orthoptera
Grasshoppers
Crickets
Diptera
Fungus gnats
Mosquitoes
Flies
Hemiptera
True bugs
Aphids
Tarnished plant bug
Four-lined plant bug
Big-eyed bugs
Squash bugs
Stink bugs
Scale
Whitefly
Mealybugs
Wheel bugs
Assassin bugs
Thysanoptera
Thrips
Coleoptera
Beetles
Colorado potato beetle
Cucumber beetle
Ladybugs
Mexican bean beetle
Flea beetle
Japanese beetle
Asparagus beetle
Wireworms
Weevils
Emerald ash borer
Hymenoptera
Ants, bees, wasps
Wasps
Cicada killers
Leaf-cutter bees
Lepidoptera
Butterflies and moths
Cabbage maggot
Cutworms
Bagworms
Leaf miner
Codling moth
Corn borer
Corn earworms
Cabbage caterpillars
Tomato hornworm
Neuroptera
Lacewings
Mantodea
Mantids
Praying mantis
Thysanoptera
Thrips
Hemiptera
True bugs
Aphids
Tarnished plant bug
Four-lined plant bug
Squash bugs
Stink bugs
Scale
Whitefly
Mealybugs
CRITTERS THAT ARE NOT INSECTS
Arachnids (includes spiders, mites, scorpions, and most recently, horseshoe crabs, no lie)
Mites
Spider mites
Gastropods
Snails and slugs
INTRODUCTION
Oh, These Are the Insects in Our Neighborhood
I had a lot of favorite classes during my undergraduate years in college (I was an unabashed nerd and loved learning new things), and one class that really stuck with me through the decades was my entomology class, taught by Dr. Johanne Wynne Fairchild.
Really, Dr. Fairchild was a powerhouse. She covered a lot of the key horticulture classes I had in school and also taught in the Biology department. But her entomology class was great fun. We had to collect insects for a collection, naturally. I used a pint-sized Mason jar that I’d found in my Great-grandma Lillian’s root cellar that had a cotton ball dipped in rubbing alcohol to kill insects, or I’d put them in a plastic bag and stick them in the freezer. I gathered insects everywhere. I got an earwig in a box of apples at the local apple orchard; I caught a sphinx moth (after class was over, I kept that specimen mounted in an old plastic watch box because it was that pretty).
The taxonomy of insects fascinated me. That was one thing that was definitely a pleasant surprise in my college classes. I knew what taxonomic keys looked like because I used to read Flora of Missouri by Julian Steyermark in high school, and had tried to use the taxonomic keys to identify plants but was absolutely bamboozled by them. Those things looked scary, and they still do to me, not gonna lie. But we learned to use them in this class and others, and they’re a valuable key when you’re out in the field.
And to me, being able to categorize insects, plants, and other creatures, and being able to fit different creatures into specific categories, is something that I’ve gotten a lot of use out of through the years.
When you’re dealing with insect pests, knowing what order they’re from helps you target them more effectively. Coleoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera – the beetle family, the fly family, the butterfly family – each of these insect families have a larval stage in their development. You can target the larval stage in these insects to catch them when they’re still vulnerable, thin-skinned, and squishy.
What’s more, controls that work for one type of larvae will also work for others. I had problems with fungus gnats in my houseplants. Then I found a very simple solution. Mosquito dunks – those floating disks you put in your garden pond to kill off mosquito larvae – also work against fungus gnat larvae. You have to use the mosquito dunks that contain BT, which is Bacillus thuringiensis, a soil bacteria that creates proteins that are toxic to insect larvae.
Basically all I did was put a chunk of mosquito dunk in my watering can. Every time I water my houseplants, they get a dose of BT, which is harmless to the plants, but kills the fungus gnat larvae that live in the soil.
This control works against both mosquito larvae and fungus gnat larvae, because both of these insects are in the fly family (Diptera), and they share the same vulnerabilities against BT.
Look, I am a straight-up naturalist nerd. I’m fascinated by animals and plants and little critters. You don’t have to be – though I think it makes life more funner to totally nerd out. I’ve found it helpful through the years to understand the whys of how the natural world works.
At any rate, here’s a book about bugs in YOUR garden. You should totally get to know the creatures that make your garden their home. Some are evil beyond words!! Some are pretty good. Some are in the middle there, have their good points and not-so-good points, but they’re all a part of the busy world of life that lives on your roses, cantaloupes, radishes, and in your soil, and makes the world an interesting place.
Let’s get started!
Japanese beetles eating up my Penelope roses. Grr.
INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT
A Handy Guidebook to Pest Management
Integrated Pest Management is a ten-dollar name for a way of dealing with pests that just makes a lot of sense.
Integrated pest management, abbreviated as IPM, is basically a mindful approach to pest control. You’re not out to wholly eradicate pests, as chemical companies have urged in the past (also, to be honest, pest eradication is a good way to sell chemicals). The aim here is control – keeping the pests at levels low enough where the damage they do is minimal or not even noticeable.
Pest eradication ends up destroying your insect allies and adversely disrupting the local ecosystem, and adds unnecessary chemicals to the groundwater and soil.
Additionally, because I am a cheap so-and-so, I’d like to point out that those damn chemicals are expensive. Why buy chemicals when I could buy a new rose, or a book, or all those fries that my kids keep demanding every night when I leave work? We have priorities here.
At any rate, IMP at its best is basically trying to figure out the best means of controlling an insect pest, whether through chemical or biological controls, or both. If chemicals are used, they’re used responsibly – spray only what you need.
When I was a municipal horticulturist, I used Round-Up to keep up with the weeding, but I