Spider Mites Control
Spider mites are pests that can ruin the plants in your flower or vegetable garden. They are generally found lurking under the leaves of your plants and what they do is they suck out the sap of the leaves leaving a yellowish discoloration.
The discoloration simply means that your leaves are on the verge of death, in a manner of speaking. Once you notice this discoloration on your plants, spider mites control should be carried out.
Spider Mites Development
Spider mites can reproduce quite so rapidly, with a female mite able to lay up to twenty eggs each day. Their life span is somewhere between two and four weeks, and if they lay at least twenty eggs each day, imagine how many eggs several females can lay on your garden by the time their time is up.
That’s about thousands of eggs in a month’s time! In addition to this, the eggs can hatch in as little as three days and they mature in as little as five days! Within this short span of their development stage, it’s no wonder they can totally wreak havoc on your garden patch if they remain undetected.
They are most abundant during the hot and dry season so it is important to be on the look-out for these two-spotted mites during this time.
Spider Mites Control Procedures
Once you suspect that they are living off your garden, the first thing you need to do is to make sure that these are truly spider mites because there are insecticides or sprays that could aggravate the problem instead of getting rid of it.
These mites are usually red in color but they may also come in yellow, white or brown colors. Since they are so small, measuring under one millimeter in length, you will need to use a magnifying lens to see them properly.
Checking for specific insecticides that address spider mite problems is essential. There are various products of this type that can eliminate the mites but since they can develop immunity to the pesticides with frequent usage, it is important to use various types at intervals so they can’t build-up resistance to the products.
Eggs usually remain untouched by the pesticides hence; further application of the products is recommended every ten to fourteen days until you have completely eliminated the problem.
During the hot and dry season, you may need to increase frequency of application. You may also place predatory mites in your garden to help with eliminating the spider mites. These predatory mites can gobble-up about five adult mites a day and around twenty eggs per day.
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