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Product Description For All Natural Flea Repellent
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In The Vegetable Garden Pest Handbook, you’ll find the simple, straightforward resources and tools you need to identify common pests of edible gardens and manage them without the use of synthetic chemical pesticides.
Climate change and newly introduced insect pests are changing the world of gardening. Pests that once produced a single generation per year are now producing two or even three, and accidentally imported pest insects have no natural predators to keep them in check. These leaf-munching critters can cause significant damage in short order, reducing your yields and costing you time and money, especially if your garden is out of balance or your plants are stressed and vulnerable.
Whether you’re a new or seasoned gardener, author and garden pro Susan Mulvihill shows you how to handle pest issues by growing healthier plants, properly identifying the culprit, and nurturing the overall ecosystem of the garden. With easy-to-use charts, you’ll learn how to identify common vegetable garden pests based on both the damage they cause and their physical appearance.
DIY pest-control projects, coupled with up-to-date info on the best natural products, physical pest-control tricks, and tips for managing pests with the use of traps and barriers, all lead to a garden where beneficial insects and pollinators are preserved while pest populations are kept in check.
Learn how to:
Get rid of squash bugs with minimal effort
Screen out root maggots
Keep cutworms at bay
Nurture the good bugs that help control tomato hornworms
Tackle an infestation of mites, thrips, or whiteflies
Send cucumber beetles packing
Limit cabbage worms with a simple, inexpensive trick
Learn about the best earth-friendly product controls for home vegetable gardeners
Identifying and controlling common vegetable garden pests has never been a favorite task of gardeners, but with Susan’s help, positive results are easier than you think!
From the Publisher
The Vegetable Garden Pest Handbook: Identify and Solve Common Pest Problems on Edible Plants – All Natural Solutions!
INTRODUCTION TO ORGANIC PEST MANAGEMENT IN THE VEGETABLE GARDEN
Growing your own food is one of life’s greatest pleasures. The act of nurturing young seedlings, being out in the fresh air, harvesting that first vine-ripened tomato, and knowing you are putting healthy food on the table all combine to make it such a positive experience.
At least, it is until that first time you head into the garden and discover holes in the broccoli leaves or the biggest caterpillar you’ve ever seen nibbling on your tomato crop. Those aren’t exactly positive experiences, are they?
MEET THE BUGS
Let’s talk about bugs in the vegetable garden. It is always disheartening to discover damage from pests that covet your lovingly grown vegetables just as much as you do. The challenge is determining who the culprits are and knowing what to do about them.
This requires a bit of sleuthing on your part by observing the bugs—if you can see them—and the type of damage they are causing. Some are nocturnal and retreat to their hiding places during the day. In those cases, a trip to the garden after dark, with flashlight in hand, is in order. But more than anything, you’ll want to be very observant and gather the facts.
ORGANIC PEST MANAGEMENT PRODUCTS AND DIY PEST CONTROLS
In the previous chapter, I identified specific vegetable garden pests and the many options you have for controlling them. In this chapter, we’ll get down to the nuts and bolts of the control methods and how to implement them. In the first half are details on easy-to-find organic products available to gardeners. The second half is filled with economical projects you can make to keep away pests or lure them into a trap and some very cool items that will add greatly to your enjoyment of gardening.
WHAT’S YOUR “BUG” TOLERANCE?
I’ve got a question for you: When you walk into your garden and see one or two problem insects, do you dive into action or wait to see if you’ll need to intervene?
In some cases, particularly when it comes to vegetable gardens, it’s important to jump in right away while the pests are at a vulnerable stage and few in number. But remember that beneficials can help us out of a tight spot.
A few years ago, I was walking through my garden and stopped to check on the currant bushes. When I saw a lot of puckered leaves, I inwardly groaned. Aphids. I turned over some leaves. Yes, lots and lots of them were on the undersides. I debated about what I wanted to do but decided I didn’t have the time at the moment.
You guessed it: My schedule got busy over the next few days and I completely forgot about those aphids. A few days later, I suddenly remembered them and dashed back out to the garden. Instead of witnessing more aphid mayhem, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that almost all of them had vanished. In their place was a collection of adult ladybugs, their larvae, and even some pupae, which are essentially pre-adults.
As you can see in the photo opposite, ladybug larvae look rather frightening. Fortunately, I knew exactly what they were and that their voracious appetite for aphids is legendary. They had come to the rescue and enjoyed quite a feast, courtesy of my forgetting about the problem.
The moral of the story is this: If we are patient, beneficials will often take care of problems for us. Chapter two profiles the most common vegetable garden pests and the timing for using simple organic controls—and it indicates the natural predators that target each pest.
ORGANIC CONTROLS
KAOLIN CLAY
ROW COVERS
SLUG AND SNAIL BAIT
BEER TRAPS FOR SLUG CONTROL
CARROT RUST FLY SCREEN
COPPER TAPE FOR SLUG CONTROL
INSECT HOTEL
REFLECTIVE PLASTIC MULCH
PEST PROFILES
CABBAGE LOOPER Family name: Noctuidae Latin name: Trichoplusia ni
Cabbage looper moth larvae primarily chew on the leaves of cabbage family crops but can be found on a few other vegetables, as well. While they are widespread, loopers only overwinter in regions where the temperatures don’t drop below freezing. These caterpillars are pale green with white, lengthwise stripes and three pairs of prolegs that cause them to move in a looping motion typical of inchworms. They can grow up to 1½ inches (3.8 cm) long. Unlike cabbage worms (Pieris rapae, page 70), which are the larvae of butterflies, loopers have fairly smooth skin. The adult moths have speckled gray forewings with an unusual white pattern on them and pale brown hindwings; they are active at night.
LIFE CYCLE
The moths lay round, cream-colored eggs that hatch in 2 to 5 days. The larvae go through several instars over the course of 3 weeks. After pupating in a thin, silky cocoon located on or near the same plant upon which they’ve fed, they emerge as moths in 1 to 2 weeks. Even though the adult stage of the moth only lasts about 12 days, they can lay up to 600 eggs in that time.
TYPICALLY SEEN ON
Cabbage family crops (arugula, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, kohlrabi, mustard, radishes, rutabagas, turnips), lettuce, peas, potatoes, spinach
SIGNS OF THEIR ACTIVITY
Feeding damage on the undersides of the leaves; jagged holes through the leaves; holes that bore into the heads of cabbage or broccoli; green frass around or below the plant damage
CONTROLS
Hand-pick the caterpillars, crush the eggs.
Apply Bacillus thuringiensis variety kurstaki to the leaves when you detect damage.
Apply insecticidal soap, Neem, plant extracts, pyrethrins, or spinosad.
Clean up garden debris
Eliminate nearby weedy areas during and at the end of the garden season to eliminate pupae.
MINUTE PIRATE BUG (Anthocoridae) (adults and nymphs)
PARASITIC WASP (Hymenoptera) (adults and larvae)
TACHINID FLY (Tachinidae) (larvae only)
PESTS IT EATS
Aphids, beet armyworms, corn earworms, harlequin bugs, various insect eggs, leafhoppers, Mexican bean beetle larvae, thrips, whiteflies
Aphids, asparagus beetles, cabbage loopers and worms, carrot rust flies, Colorado potato beetles, corn earworms, cucumber beetles, cutworms, diamondback moths, flea beetles, harlequin bug eggs, hornworms, Japanese beetles, leafminers
Beet armyworms, cabbage loopers, cabbage worms, Colorado potato beetle larvae, corn earworms, cucumber beetle larvae, cutworms, diamondback moth larvae, earwigs, Japanese beetle larvae, Mexican bean beetle larvae, squash bug larvae
PHYSICAL FEATURES
Adults have oval black bodies with white markings on their backs. The nymphs’ orange bodies are teardropshaped and they have red eyes.
There are many species, with the most common being Braconid (pictured), Chalcid, Ichneumon, and Trichogramma. They have slender bodies with narrow waists, threadlike antennae, and are black, red, or metallic.
Tachinid flies come in gray, brown, yellow, red, or metallic colors. They have rounded bodies and hairy abdomens.
HOW TO ENCOURAGE
Adults require the pollen and sap from spring-flowering plants when they first emerge in spring. Plant cover crops, such as buckwheat and crimson clover, and early blooming perennials (i.e., basket of gold, candytuft, coreopsis, daisies, and yarrow).
Provide pollen and nectar sources with flowers in the aster, carrot, and legume families.
Adults require nectar and pollen so plant flowers that bloom all season, including those of the carrot, aster, and milkweed families. Keep leaf litter for larvae to pupate in.
ASIN : B08ZSZBR85
Publisher : Cool Springs Press (April 20, 2021)
Publication date : April 20, 2021
Language : English
File size : 36485 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Enabled
Word Wise : Not Enabled
Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
Print length : 461 pages
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