Bugs we like
You can’t talk about gardening without talking about bugs. There are a lot of bugs that will destroy a garden if you let them. Aphids, whiteflies, cabbage worms – I could list plenty. What we don’t talk about very much, however, are some of the common garden bugs that are beneficial to our plants. It’s all about a balance and encouraging the right bugs.
Bees, of course, are the superstars. That’s probably fair, given that they pollinate so many of the world’s food crops. But there are other bugs that should be superstars, too. Some of them are pollinators, others eat pests, or in one case, they lay their eggs on pests where they will hatch and eat the plant-destroying bugs. Sounds gross, but it’s effective.
- Spiders
Okay, technically these are arachnids and not insects, but they definitely do some serious work in keeping your garden free of pests.
- Ladybirds
The ladybird, lady beetle or ladybug, might be the most popular of common garden bugs. They are cute. They’re also deadly. Not to us humans, but watch out if you’re an aphid. The ladybird larvae can eat dozens of aphids every hour.
- Green lacewings
These delicate-looking bugs are fierce predators. They feast on aphids and other soft-bodied insects.
- Ground beetles
These common bugs aren’t just one bug. There are tens of thousands of species of ground beetles worldwide. Stealth and speed, determination and voracious predatory behaviour are some of the traits associated with these black beetles, commonly found in your garden’s litter and mulch layers. They are super beneficial for your garden, making a meal of aphids, mites, root maggots, and even slugs and snails.Their official scientific family name is Carabidae (carabid beetles) and I suppose they’re in the shape of the archetypal beetle. You can’t miss them. These beetles have sharp mandibles (even as immatures or grubs) that can pick up and hold any type of prey that fits the
right dimensions. Their job is to “keep the balance” down in the soil. But some species have a wonderful preference for slugs… and that, surely, is music to many a gardener’s ears!
- Steel-blue ladybird larvae
These beetles eradicate aphids on your prized roses and other ornamentals. But they don’t eat as much as you might think. It’s actually their larvae that consume a fair amount of prey when they are in full growth cycle. Although a few ladybird species scoff aphids as their preferred food source, others will grab anything that walks by: psyllids, caterpillars, mites and whitefly. So when it comes to lowering specific pest populations, only those ladybirds that confine themselves to one or two types of prey are reasonably useful. A good example is the steel-blue ladybird (Halmus chalybeus). It feeds on scale insects and loves to cruise the very places where its prey is common: up your citrus trees and on your flax, hydrangeas and rose bushes.
- Mealybug-munching ladybirds
The so-called mealybug ladybird has a tongue-twister of a scientific name: Cryptolaemus montrouzieri. Anybody with an issue with mealybugs knows how difficult it is to control these woolly sap suckers. Mineral oil sprays need to be applied regularly and even the harshest systemic insecticides are often not enough to eliminate them. Thank goodness, then, for the mealybug ladybird. Its larvae are always on the hunt for a mouthful of cotton wool. Ironically, these ladybird larvae also just happen to look like overgrown mealybugs: yep… a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
- Harvestmen
The harvestman has eight legs, 2 eyes and a body that consists of just one discernible segment (unlike a spider which has 8 legs but 8 eyes and 2 body segments). This predator, somewhat related to a spider, tends to run around the ground and the lower parts of plants. Anything of suitable size can be prey, from its own siblings to small slugs. Although it is a very general predator, it has the ability to survive in unsprayed gardens when there aren’t many pests about. That means that harvestmen are often the first ones on the job when pests wake up and start to multiply in spring. There are 12 species of harvestmen. Phalangium opilio is the one that appears to be most partial to the eggs of the cabbage white butterfly.
8. Predatory mites
Anystis baccarum
These are useful little tyrants to have in any garden. The largest species, and the easiest to spot by eye, is the bright crimson whirlygig mite (Anystis baccarum). It runs around like an idiot in a ploy to cover as much ground – or leaf – as possible, to increase the chance of encountering its prey. They can carry away caterpillars four times their own size! Another much smaller, dull-red predator mite can often be found wandering among colonies of spider mites. Just look at your beans, pipfruit, stone fruit or box hedges. This predator (Phytoseiulus persimilis) quietly goes about its business, eating spider mites and their eggs. Phytoseiulus persimilis is so good at its job that it is bred in captivity (by BioForce and Zonda) to help commercial growers keep spider mite infestations down in their crops. It’s a mighty, domesticated control agent.
- Hoverflies
Hoverflies – those smallish flies that hover dead-still in front of flowers all over your garden – have very clever maggots. Some of our native species lay their eggs amongst aphid colonies and they do that for a good reason: their maggots are carnivores and wreak havoc and carnage in the aphid population.
- Parasitic flies
Trigonospila brevifacies
Believe it or not, there are parasitic flies buzzing about in your garden. Trigonospila brevifacies is a small (half the size of a common housefly) but beautiful fly that as introduced to New Zealand from Australia in the 1960s to help control nuisance leafroller caterpillars in orchards. The female fly lays a single egg just behind the leafroller caterpillar’s head. The maggot that hatches immediately burrows into the caterpillar’s body and starts eating its innards. The maggot completes its lifecycle inside its host, before a new parasitic fly emerges through the wasted body.
- Parasitic wasps
Encarsia formosa
Some parasitoids are host specific and are therefore really good at controlling pests. Two species are very much in demand by commercial growers – Encarsia formosa and Aphidius colemani – and both are commercially available. Encarsia formosa is perhaps the most famous parasitic wasp in the world. It has long been used to control whitefly on greenhouse tomatoes. Aphidius colemani is a small parasitic wasp that lays its eggs inside aphids. To attract these parasitoids, plant wildflowers, especially umbelliferous species such as wild carrot, parsley and Queen Anne’s lace. They provide a smorgasbord of pollen and nectar.
- Ichneumon wasps
These larger parasitoids are quite visible and elegant to watch as they search your plants for smells and trails of caterpillars and other potential hosts. Their antennae move constantly, sometimes “drumming” on leaves and twigs to pick up chemical cues. Some ichneumonids parasitise caterpillars; others go for the pupae or chrysalids. A particularly beautiful black and white species with orange and black legs, known as Xanthocryptus novozealandicus, sniffs out lemon tree borer grubs inside the twigs, depositing an egg inside the host’s body. Instead of a borer beetle, another ichneumonid wasp will hatch from the internally consumed body.
Source: GrowGoodNZ website