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Pest and Disease ControlPublisher: Gardener's Suppy Company, May 26, 2004 Take care of your plants Identifying the pest Predators, traps and deterrents Organic insecticides Pathogens and disease Resources Take care of your plants Insect pests and plant pathogens are a challenge for every gardener and the temptation to wipe them out is strong. We encourage you to resist the urge to reach for an arsenal of chemical weapons. In the short term they may provide a quick knock-down to the attackers, but they may also kill beneficial organisms. In the long term, you expose yourself and the landscape to toxic chemicals, and risk disrupting the natural ecosystem that you and your garden inhabit. All things considered, an organic approach is both safer and more effective. Here's how you can work with nature to control pests and diseases, and enjoy a healthier garden and harvest.
Your Garden Is an Ecosystem Instead, the organic approach requires that you spend a bit more time in your garden, take extra good care of your plants, and keep an eye out for early signs of insect attack or disease symptoms. As gardeners, we can learn to tolerate some damage to our plants, and we should use such damage as a signal that our plants need more attention. Not every insect is an enemy. Some are pollinators, some break down organic matter, and some are beneficial predators that feed on the real enemies. You want to be able to identify your friends and foes, and then encourage the friends and frustrate the foes. Effective and appropriate technologies, such as physical barriers, traps, and specific biological agents, are available to assist in your efforts to protect your garden and at the same time maintain a safe, harmonious natural environment.
Care of Your Plants Grow your plants in healthy soil. Add organic matter to your garden every year to improve nutrient levels, soil structure, and water-holding capacity. Make sure your plants are getting the right amount of water and all the nutrients they need, supplemented with organic fertilizers if necessary. Don't force plants to compete with masses of weeds for water and nutrients. Use mulches, such as landscape fabric or plastic, and pull a few weeds every time you visit the garden. Thin your seedlings so the plants are not overcrowded and there is good air circulation between them; check seed packets for thinning instructions.
Garden Cleanup: Remove and dispose of any diseased or infested plants. Till other debris into the soil or put it in your compost pile. Then cultivate the soil so that any remaining eggs, larvae, or pupae will be exposed to birds and cold temperatures. Keep on top of the weeds around your garden, since they can also harbor insect pests. Make garden clean-up a part of your yearly routine.
Crop Rotation Crop rotation also helps keep soil nutrients in balance over time. Heavy feeders, such as tomatoes and lettuce, can be followed the next year by legumes, such as peas and beans, which actually return nitrogen to the soil through microorganisms on their roots. The third year, you could let the soil "rest" by planting light feeders in that spot, such as carrots or beets.
Companion Planting Basil is said to be beneficial to tomatoes; carrots grow well with leaf lettuce, and their roots exude a substance that helps peas; and members of the allium family, such as onions and garlic, effectively deter pests that attack roses. You also need to be aware of certain plants that hate each other and inhibit each other's growth. For example, tomatoes and members of the brassica family (broccoli, cabbage, etc.) do not grow well when planted together. Consider planting an assortment of flowers or wildflowers in the fields, meadows, or formal beds that surround or adjoin your vegetable garden. Ornamental alliums, such as nodding onion (Allium cernuum), make especially good insectary plants, as do most members of the Apiaceae (Celery Family), Asteraceae (Aster Family), and Lamiaceae (Mint Family). Growing insectary plants near the garden provides habitat for many beneficial insects, which in turn help control pest populations around your other plants. Try intercropping based on growth characteristics. Deep-rooted plants and shallow-rooted plants grow well together in a group, because they draw water and nutrients from different layers of soil. Examples include Swiss chard and beans, or lettuce and carrots. Corn and cucumbers have another symbiotic relationship: both like heat and well-drained soil, but cukes like the shade provided by corn plants.
Mixed Cropping Interplanting herbs and flowers that attract beneficial insects, such as dill or fennel, is another effective way to give the "good guys" an edge.
Timed Planting
Resistant Varieties
Even when you take good care of your plants, you will still encounter some insect problems.
Sucking Insects
Chewing Insects In general, insects are easiest to control during the egg stage. Simply remove the eggs from the underside of leaves and dispose of them. Since many insects reproduce more than once during a season, you should keep your eyes open for eggs all summer long. Larvae and nymphs often overwinter in the soil or in plant debris, so garden cleanup in the fall is a good means of prevention.
Consult the recommended books for tips on how to recognize the symptoms of various insect attacks, and for detailed information on the life cycles of your problem pests.
Row covers are an effective deterrent to flying insects that want to lay eggs on your plants. If you use row covers, you may need to remove them to allow pollination to occur, and then replace them after the flowers have disappearted. You should also be aware of the life cycle of the insect you are trying to control: be careful not to trap overwintering larvae inside a row cover! You can also buy traps that attract insects by using color, taste and sex hormones. Examples include traps for aphids, whiteflies, thrips and Japanese beetles. Slugs have a particular affection for stale beer and will drown in a shallow saucer of it placed in your garden. Our animal friends can be pests too. The Golden Rule here is: don't harm them, just make them want to leave your garden alone. A simple fence will keep out dogs and possibly cats. Deer are great jumpers, and it generally takes a seven-foot fence to deter them (unless it's an electric fence!). Repellents can be quite effective for deer, especially if you periodically change the location of the repellent. Deer become bolder when something becomes familiar. Electric fence systems can prevent rabbits, woodchucks, deer, and perhaps your own chickens from getting into the garden. Burrowing animals, such as moles, voles, mice and gophers can be repelled by devices that create harmless sounds or vibrations they don't like. Deer, raccoons and skunks can also be deterred with sonic devices.
You can try to keep birds away from your vegetables with scarecrows and other homemade noise and commotion-makers. Netting can also protect plants from birds, especially fruits and berries.
Biological Insect Control The biological control most commonly used in gardens is Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). This bacterium kills many kinds of insect larvae by paralyzing the digestive system. Bt is sold as a dust or liquid under such trade names as Dipel and Thuricide. A new strain that is effective against Colorado potato beetle larvae (Bt "San Diego") is sold under trade names such as Beetle Beater. Milky spore (Bacillus popillae) is another example of a biological pest control. Once the bacterium becomes established in the soil, it can effectively control the Japanese beetle population in your yard for up to twenty years.
Natural Insecticides Be aware of any specific toxicities indicated on the label, and spray late in the day when honeybees have returned to their hives. Always wear a mask and remove contact lenses when applying dusts, and wear gloves and protective clothing when applying any kind of insecticide. Follow label directions carefully.
Diatomaceous Earth (DE)
Insecticidal Soaps
Botanical Insecticides
As with other insecticides, take proper precautions when applying botanical pest controls. Wear gloves and protective clothing, and avoid using any insecticides near waterways, because they could be harmful to fish.
As with insect pests, as soon as you notice a disease problem your first job is to make a diagnosis and identify the culprit. Treatment usually involves removing the infected parts of a plant, or the whole plant, and destroying them. The same good cultural practices that prevent insect pest infestations are the first line of defense against disease-causing plant pathogens. Build healthy soil, use compost, keep your flowers and vegetables appropriately watered, and clean up garden debris.
Ways to prevent disease problems: * Don't overcrowd your plants. Good air circulation prevents the damp conditions that promote the growth of fungi and other disease organisms. * Watch moisture levels. Notice if the soil is too wet or too dry and correct these conditions. Try to keep foliage dry. * Practice crop rotation. Even more than insects, disease pathogens can persist in the soil from one season to the next. Moving susceptible crops from year to year is excellent preventive medicine. * Inspect your plants and regularly prune leaves or stems that you suspect may be diseased. Destroy the cuttings. * Be sanitary. Humans are effective, if innocent, vectors of plant disease: pathogens can be spread by your footwear, hands, and clothes. Wash your hands before and after working with your plants, and clean your clothes if you think you have come in contact with sick plants. * Clean your tools. Soil clinging to tools may harbor disease organisms. Similarly, clean out pots and flats before reusing them. A 10 percent bleach solution (1 part bleach to nine parts water) makes a good disinfectant. Sometimes what looks like disease is really a nutritional problem. Improper pH, deficiencies or excesses of certain micro- or macronutrients in the soil, or temperature extremes can cause plants to appear diseased, and in a sense they are. Always check your reference books first to rule out nutritional problems. Often, such problems can easily be addressed by adding lime, compost, fertilizer or specific soil amendments. Foliar feeding, especially with organics like seaweed and fish emulsion, can be very helpful for boosting your plants' general health.
As you continue year by year to build healthy soil in your garden, to understand the nuances of your own ecosystem, and to learn more about insects, animal pests, disease pathogens, and their habits, organic prevention and control will become second nature. You'll find that you have fewer and fewer pest and disease problems, and it will become easier every year to control them without chemicals.
The Gardener's Bug Book by Barbara D. Pleasant (Storey, 1994). Rodale's Flower Garden Problem Solver by Jeff and Liz Ball (Rodale, 1990). Bugs, Slugs, and Other Thugs by Rhonda Massingham Hart (Storey, 1991). Natural Insect Control ed. Warren Schultz (Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 1994). Carrots Love Tomatoes by Louise Riotte (Garden Way Publishing, 1975).
Web Sites Biological Control: A Guide to Natural Enemies in North America |
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