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In My Garden Blog

Lower South
July 30, 2009
By Skip Richter,
Austin, TX

3199

This syrphid fly larvae has a yellow aphid in its mouth (small end) while nearby other aphids have turned brown indicating they have been parasitized by a tiny wasp species.

Beneficial Insect Allies

A landscape or garden filled with a variety of plant species is a highly complex ecological system inhabited by multitudes of insects and other small creatures. Each affects many other species in various ways whether they are predators and prey, or competitors for shelter and food supplies.

There is also a fascinating interaction to the balance of nature in our gardens. By working to maintain this balance we can create landscapes and gardens where pest problems are minimized.

Most of the pest control in our gardens does not come out the end of a spray wand. Pests are kept in check by weather conditions, diseases (yes pests get diseases), and other insects. It is only when these factors break down that we gardeners may need to step in and take action to manage an outbreak.

Natural enemies of garden pests are at work 24/7 keeping pest populations suppressed. Take aphids for example. A single aphid can be born pregnant and within days it is popping out babies like a Pez dispenser! When you do the math, one solitary aphid in the spring could multiply geometrically so that by summer a garden would be knee deep in aphids if weather and naturally enemies were not at work.

Alas but these poor little aphids (note the feigned concern!) are running for their lives from the moment they are born. Lady beetle adults and larvae are chasing them down as are lacewing larvae with giant "ice hook" type mouthparts. Parasitoid wasps are flying overhead about to land and inject an egg to hatch and grow inside the aphid's body, eating it from the inside out -- an entomological version of the movie Alien! Syrphid fly larvae are laying eggs nearby that will hatch out into "Jabba the Hut" type maggots who'll begin to grab aphids to suck the contents out of them. Life ain't easy when you're an aphid!

There are many other beneficial insects in our gardens working silently behind the scenes to keep pest populations in check. These include true bugs such as predatory stink bugs, bigeyed bugs, assassin bugs, ambush bugs, damsel bugs, threadlegged bugs, minute pirate bugs, and flower bugs. Predatory beetles include the ground dwelling rove beetles and the most famous beneficial of all, the lady beetle, which can consume several thousand aphids during its lifetime. Hurray!

Lacewings, praying mantids, predatory mites and spiders are among the other insect-feeding beneficials in our gardens. Then there are the beneficial flies which include robber flies, long legged flies, and hover or syrphid flies which often look like tiny shiny bees darting about. Their larvae are effective predators of aphids and certain other insect pests.

Wasps are one of our best groups of predators. The next time you see a webworm nest in that old pecan tree try breaking the web up with a pole and then check it out 20 minute or so later. You'll likely see wasps moving in to haul off the bounty. A large paper wasp colony can consume up to 2,000 caterpillars in a single season.

Parasitoids feed on and inside insects. Some lay eggs inside caterpillar egg, their larvae consuming the contents. Others lay eggs inside insects such as aphids or caterpillars. Way cool! There are even parasitoid species of flies.

Take time to learn about the beneficial insects in your garden. A web search will provide helpful photos for identifying them. As you go about your gardening activities avoid broad spectrum sprays, include plants that provide pollen and nectar, and remember that a few pests are okay as they attract the beneficial that feed on them.

add a comment Comments on Beneficial Insect Allies

We welcome your questions and comments about this column. If you have gardening questions unrelated to the column, please ask them on our message boards.

add a comment
Marilyn Kircus, Dripping Springs, TX
Thanks for listing so many good bugs.  I'll try to learn to
recognize all of them in my garden. 

I hope your next article will give us a list of plants to grow to
attract these bugs as well as management techniques to use before
having to spray. 
add a comment
jill
Where is the best place to get pictures of benificials on the web?
add a comment
Hella
This website might help. It if from A&M University.

http://vegipm.tamu.edu/imageindex.html

add a comment
Skip
Thanks for the suggestions Marilyn. I'll put that on the list of
things to write about. Stay tuned!
add a comment
Skip
Great suggestion Hella!
Jill, some other sites to visit are:
http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/
http://cipm.ncsu.edu/ent/biocontrol/goodbugs/tachinid.htm
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/TOPIC_Beneficial_Insects
http://www.biconet.com/biocontrol.html
However as you read about a beneficial insect try typing the name
into Google and doing an image search too.
Search NGA:

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