What Do I Do About All Of The Aphids In My Aero Garden?
Quick Navigation
- Aphid Overview
- What Do Aphids Look Like?
- Life Cycle of Aphids
- Common Habitat of Aphids
- What Do Aphids Eat?
- How To Get Rid Of Aphids
- Organic Aphid Control
- Ants & Aphids: Wiping Them Both Out
- Environmental Aphid Control
- Beneficial Insects To The Rescue!
- Preventing Aphids
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: My plants have curled leaves after aphids are gone! Help?
- Q: Do aphids jump?
Oh, do I ever hate aphids. These little pesky insects suck the life out of my plants (quite literally!), and wherever they go, they bring plant destruction in their wake. Their presence causes even more disastrous problems to occur to my garden.
But there's a way to eliminate aphids from your landscape, and by keeping on top of the problem, you can keep them away for years to come. Today, I'll tell you everything you need to know about these tiny pests, how to treat problems that they cause, and how to get them out of your garden for good!
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Best Solutions for Aphid Control:
- Safer Brand Insecticidal Soap
- Safer Brand Home and Garden Spray
- Neem Bliss Cold-Pressed Neem Oil
- Tanglefoot Tangle-Trap
Environmental Control Options:
- Lacewings
- Parasitic wasps
- Insect houses
To P revent Aphids, Use:
- Neem oil
- Diatomaceous earth
Aphid Overview
Common Name(s) | Aphids, plant lice, greenflies, blackflies, whiteflies, rose aphids, potato aphids, bean aphids, cabbage aphids, green peach aphids, wooly aphids, wooly apple aphids, melon aphids, lettuce root aphids, plus many more |
Scientific Name(s) | Over 4400 species (250 harmful to agriculture/forestry). |
Family | Aphididae |
Origin | Worldwide, but prefer temperate zones |
Plants Affected | Most food crops (excepting garlic and chives), fruit trees, roses and other flowering plants. |
Common Remedies | Insecticidal soaps, diatomaceous earth, pyrethrin sprays, orange oil sprays, neem oil, flour, beneficial insects, row covers, reflective mulch cloth, companion planting trap plants or repellent plants |
So, what are aphids? The Aphididae family of insects is incredibly wide. There's over 4400 species of aphids, about 250 of which are destructive on most common garden plants. There's tiny black bugs. There's tiny green bugs. There's tiny white bugs. Some are reddish, pinkish, or brown. They suck the plant saps out of your plants' leaves, and the plants die.
Does this seem intimidating? It shouldn't be. Aphids all have similar life cycles, and all can be defeated in the same fashion. Whether you're battling rose aphids, potato aphids or wooly aphids, there is still hope that they can be defeated, as long as you act quickly.
What Do Aphids Look Like?
Most aphids are pear-shaped, with long antennae and long legs. Some varieties, such as the wooly aphid, appear to have a wooly or waxy coating. This is caused by a secretion which they produce. Other varieties lack the secretion. As said above, they come in multiple shades and colors, including black, white, green, red, pink, brown, or even almost-colorless.
Adult aphids are usually wingless, although most aphid species have some winged forms. This allows them to disperse to other areas more easily, especially when the population is high or they need to spread out to find more on which to feed. In some cases, this happens only during the spring or fall, but other species can develop winged forms as necessary to keep the population growing.
Many aphids will cluster on the underside of a leaf to suck the sap from it. They aren't commonly disturbed, even if the leaf is moved. You can occasionally find leaves with hundreds and hundreds of them clinging to the back.
Life Cycle of Aphids
One of the reasons that aphids are so widespread, especially in areas like California that have moderate temperatures, is because they don't actually have to mate before having young. Female adult aphids give birth to live female nymphs in a process known as parthogenesis. In fact, in moderate regions, aphids can often live year-round, and the population can continually grow.
Unlike many other insects, aphids don't normally lay eggs during optimal weather conditions. The female adult will give birth to her nymphs. Those nymphs will then go through four stages of development, shedding their skin as they increase in size. In warm conditions, adulthood can take as little as 7-10 days to full maturity. And as an adult nymph can have as many as 80 young in a week, population growth is incredibly rapid.
A few species of aphids that live in climates with colder winters will produce sexual, winged forms during the late summer and early fall. These aphids will mate and lay their eggs typically on the underside of leaves of perennial plants. The eggs do not hatch until weather conditions are optimal, which means that come spring, another upsurge in the aphid population will rapidly occur.
Needless to say, reducing the population of aphids in your yard is essential, and must be done quickly and consistently enough that they don't just replenish their numbers.
Common Habitat of Aphids
Aphids tend to live where they eat, and what they eat depends on the species of aphid. They can be found on most fruit and vegetable crops, on some flowering plants like roses or chrysanthemums, on trees, and in some bushes. Often, the wingless aphids remain hidden on the underside of leaves, but it's very easy to spot a large infestation as they're clustered together in large quantities.
Colonies can also be identified if black, sooty mold begins to appear on plants, as that is a sign of mold growing on the aphid secretion known as honeydew. Honeydew is a sticky, sweet material that can create more problems (such as sooty mold), and which entices ants to come feed on it. Some species of ants actually farm aphids. If you're finding sooty mold on the leaves of your plants, it's quite likely that you have a severe aphid infestation!
What Do Aphids Eat?
Aphids bite into the underside of a leaf and feed on the plant's sap that's stored in the leaf. While a few aphids on a plant is not enough to cause major concern, large populations draining the sap can cause plants to yellow, wilt, and wither. Since aphids become carriers for any plant diseases that a plant they've been consuming has, they can spread disease if they move to another plant. Some varieties of aphid also are carriers for other plant toxins, and when they feed, they will infect plants with those toxins.
Most aphids tend to prefer a singular type of plant. So, for instance, a potato aphid is most likely going to prey on potato plants. Still, there are some varieties of aphid that will feast on multiple plant species. One example is the green peach aphid. Green peach aphids typically stick to stone fruit trees like peaches and plums, but they will also happily eat tomatoes, peppers, spinach, lettuce, carrots, corn, cucurbits like cucumbers, melons, and squash, and flowering plants like roses.
A few species, such as the lettuce root aphid, actually will suck on the roots of the plant rather than the leaves or stems. These are harder to identify as they may be under the soil, but cause similar damage to other aphid species.
How To Get Rid Of Aphids
While they can seem unconquerable, there are some steps you can take to eliminate the aphid threat in your garden. Like most insect infestations, you can start by pinching or pruning off heavily-infested leaves from plants. But what if you need more help, and pinching and pruning isn't handling it anymore?
Organic Aphid Control
When trying to kill aphids, products like Safer Brand Soap can help significantly. This insecticidal soap kills not only aphids, but earwigs, mites and whiteflies, grasshoppers, mealy bugs, soft scales, and a host of other insects. While the term 'soap' may be confusing as it's not like your normal dish soap, it does a marvelous job of eliminating aphid populations by coating their bodies so that they can't breathe and suffocate. It's organic (the active ingredient is potassium salts of fatty acids) and can be used all the way through the plant's life cycle up to harvest time.
If your problem is very severe, adding some pyrethrins to the mix helps. Safer Brand Home and Garden Spray combines the potassium salts of fatty acids with pyrethrins, making it an effective way to kill aphids as well as a host of other insects. This option is great for people who're experiencing heavy problems with both aphids and other insects such as mosquitoes, ants and roaches.
Neem oil works well to clear up aphids, too. The oil coats the eggs and smothers them, and it does much the same to the adults.
A homemade remedy for killing aphids is to mix a quart of water with a teaspoon of dish soap and a pinch of cayenne pepper. Blend it together well and apply it directly to the plants. The cayenne pepper acts as a repellent, and the dish soap will coat the insects and cause them to smother.
Ants & Aphids: Wiping Them Both Out
I keep mentioning that some ant species farm aphids for their honeydew. It happens a lot more often than most people think, and if you are seeing a lot of ants running up and down your plants, check the leaves for aphids that they might be tucking away there!
Another problem if you have ants farming aphids, especially on fruit trees or woody plants, is to use a product like Tanglefoot Tangle-Trap. This is a very sticky solution that will catch ants marching up the stems, branches or trunks of trees and keep them from farming aphids or getting to the fruit. This also can be effective for aphids on roses if they're ant-farmed colonies, although it won't prevent the aphids themselves. This doesn't work as well on softer plants, and it is incredibly sticky stuff, so be careful when using this around children or pets.
Environmental Aphid Control
Often, just getting the aphids off the plants initially is a good way to slow the destruction of your plants. Using a Bug-Blaster or other sprayer and plain water to knock the aphids off the leaves will slow them down or stop them entirely.
Something to consider is that aphids are attracted to plants with soft new growth. Over-watering or over-fertilizing your plants may make them more enticing to an aphid population, and may have other negative connotations for your plants too. While you can't prevent new growth on young plants (nor do you want to!), maintaining your older plants properly helps you to protect them from aphid attack.
If you live in an area where frogs are common, encourage one to live under your edible plants! Frogs like to eat aphids as well as a number of other pest insects such as squash bugs, cabbage worms, and cabbage loopers.
Beneficial Insects To The Rescue!
One of the most popular ways to eliminate aphids from an environmental standpoint is to make sure their natural predators are widespread in your garden. To do this, you can release ladybugs, and as ladybugs eat aphids quite happily, they'll gobble down your garden pests. When you do release ladybugs, do so at dusk or in the early evening, as they'll immediately fly away during the daytime. Spray a fine mist of water onto the plants just before you release, as the moisture may convince them to stick around longer. While they'll still eventually fly away to develop their own colonies, they should wipe out your aphids before they go.
Other beneficial insects include lacewings and parasitic wasps. A lacewing larva can eat up to 600 aphids before it becomes adult. While parasitic wasps don't typically consume aphids, they do consume other pest insects that may eat aphids and then populate the garden, and having them in your yard will keep the aphids for the ladybugs and lacewings instead of for pests.
If you do choose to use beneficial insects, you can increase the likelihood that they will stick around by adding flowering plants that they prefer to drink the nectar of when aphids aren't available. Planting chives, caraway, dill, fennel, marigolds, cosmos, and sweet alyssum in your garden can help keep your ladybug and lacewing population steady, even after the aphids are mostly consumed.
You can also provide housing for your beneficial insects. An insect house can provide shelter for ladybugs, lacewings, and single bees among other types of good bugs. While there's no guarantees that your beneficial insects will take up permanent residence, it's a great open invitation, and if they do decide to stay, you'll have pollinators and natural aphid predators all the time.
Preventing Aphids
Diatomaceous earth is incredibly effective as a repellent. Made of finely-powdered shells from diatoms, food-grade diatomaceous earth will slice up the soft bodies of insects which crawl over it, although it's completely harmless to humans and pets. It can be sprinkled or dusted over all surfaces of a plant to create a repellent barrier, although it does need to be reapplied after rainy conditions.
Let's not forget the neem oil. This multipurpose tool coats the exterior of the aphids and causes them to smother and die, plus it has antifungal aspects which help to clear up fungal growths like powdery mildew and black sooty mold. It also helps to cut down the speed of repopulation by acting as a repellent on the leaves and stems of your plants.
An old-fashioned remedy for aphids is to dust plants with flour, as the flour will constipate the aphids and deter them from sticking around. Like diatomaceous earth, this needs to be repeated if it rains.
Companion planting can help discourage aphids from taking up residence. Some plants, such as mustards and nasturtiums, will actually lure aphids to them. This means that you might be able to plant mustard or nasturtium as a trap plant to keep aphids away from your other plants. Similarly, there are plants which repel aphids such as catnip, garlic, and chives. Garlic and chives are especially helpful around roses or other flowering plants that tend to draw aphids, but can be used to good effect around your edible plants as well – especially lettuce.
You can discourage early aphid infestations on your younger plants by growing your plants under row covers. This will keep the aphids away from those tastier young shoots and leaves entirely, but when your plants begin to flower, you'll need to remove the covers for pollinating purposes.
Silver-colored reflective mulch cloth has been shown to be quite effective in repelling aphid infestation, especially during the warmer months of the year. Summer squash, curcurbits, and other related plants have shown significantly lower levels of aphid infestation, plus increased yields, when a reflective mulch is used.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: My plants have curled leaves after aphids are gone! Help?
A: Unfortunately, even after you've figured out how to kill aphids and eliminated the pest, the curled leaves are likely to remain. If this is a plant such as a Swiss chard or other leafy vegetable, there's not much you can do to restore the shape of the leaves, although you can certainly try to encourage new leaf growth. If it's on a non-edible leaf, leaving the leaves intact is okay, as they'll continue to photosynthesize. But for visual purposes, you can trim the most curled leaves off as long as there's plenty of other leaves left to keep the plant alive.
Q: Do aphids jump?
A: You might be mixing up aphids (which are occasionally called whiteflies) with true whiteflies. True whiteflies are also called "jumping plant lice", which is even more confusing as aphids are often called "plant lice". Aphids themselves do not typically jump, although they do crawl (and in limited situations may be able to fly). So no, aphids don't jump!
As you can see, if you don't attack the aphids when you first find them, they'll rapidly breed and spread to take over your garden. These simple steps and measures can help you kill aphids when you spot them, and with luck you can keep them out of your yard in the future. Are there any steps I didn't cover that you'd recommend in the war against aphids? Share them in the comments!
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The Green Thumbs Behind This Article:
What Do I Do About All Of The Aphids In My Aero Garden?
Source: https://www.epicgardening.com/aphids/
Posted by: goodlateny.blogspot.com
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