Beneficial Insects for Your Garden

By Celeste Stewart, published Jun 21, 2006
Published Content: 155  Total Views: 208,233  Favorited By: 7 CPs
Rating: 3.2 of 5
Your garden is teeming with life. Underneath that nice moist soil live entire colonies of creepy crawlies such as insects, spiders and worms. Some come out and munch on your precious seedlings while others prefer to munch on each other. The trick to a successful garden is to attract the beneficial insects and repel those that would destroy your plants.

While you could resort to pesticides and chemicals, it’s not always necessary. Why not put the beneficial insects to work for you? You can buy beneficial bugs at garden centers, through mail order or over the internet. Many of the beneficial insects don’t do the actual eating, rather they reproduce and their larvae offspring do the consuming.

You will also want to provide plants that attract beneficial insects and bugs such as marigolds, nasturtiums, butterfly weed, clover, coriander, dill, fennel, yarrow or wild carrot. These plants attract and provide homes for your friendly bugs.

While it’s tempting to release lots of good bugs, don’t over do it and overpopulate your garden with them. They need enough prey to eat and if there’s too much competition or not enough to eat, they will move on to someone else’s garden.

The list of beneficial insects and other critters is long and varied. Here’s just a sampling to get you started.

Lady bugs are well known among experienced gardeners. Not only are they cute, they eat aphids. Each adult lady bug can consume up to 5,000 aphids in their lifetime. In addition, the lady bug lays between three to four dozen eggs per day. Their hungry larvae then join in on the aphid feast.

A cryptolaemus beetle looks similar to a lady bug but is darker in color. These bugs immediately search out mealy bugs and gobble them up. They lay their eggs on infested plants so that their larvae feed on the mealy bugs too.

Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Most Commented On