Lots of beneficial bugs and birds eat problem insects. Attract the good guys, and you'll reduce problems with the bad ones. Here are measures you can take to attract the good guys to the garden.
June 30, 2015
Lots of beneficial bugs and birds eat problem insects. Attract the good guys, and you'll reduce problems with the bad ones. Here are measures you can take to attract the good guys to the garden.
Praying mantises, ladybugs and aphid wolves (the larvae of green lacewings) are natural foes of aphids. Hover flies and wasps kill aphids by injecting their eggs into aphids.
House wrens, mockingbirds, warblers and catbirds devour harmful moth and butterfly caterpillars and the larvae of numerous other insect species.
Woodpeckers pick out eggs of codling moths and many other insects that hide in tree bark.
Trichogramma wasps are beneficial insects that parasitize many moth eggs, including those that hatch into armyworms and cutworms.
Birds are hard-working grub eaters.
Robins, starlings and flickers, equipped with the long, pointed beaks needed for poking into soil, help control Japanese beetles by eating the larvae. Other birds, including cardinals and catbirds, eat the adult beetles.
Blackbirds, ducks, frogs and toads, lizards and snakes all consider slugs and brown snails a delicacy.
Lacewings and ladybugs are good whitefly predators.
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