AphidsBy Susan Jones Among the most common orchid pests, aphids are slow-moving, soft-bodied insects related to scale. Usually less than 1/8-inch long, greenish white or black, aphids have soft, pear-shaped bodies, long legs, antennae, and sucking mouthparts to feed on plant juices. Most are wingless, but winged versions appear to migrate between plants when a colony becomes crowded..
Fortunately aphids have soft bodies and are not difficult to eradicate Life Cycle When colonies become overcrowded, winged forms appear, to fly to establish new colonies. The insects can cycle continuously under greenhouse conditions, their rate of development affected only by temperature. In the autumn, females begin producing a few males. Females born at the same time have eggs within their bodies; they mate and lay the eggs to provide next season's offspring.
Symptoms Developing aphids shed white skins. A pile of them on upper leaf surfaces may be your first sign that these destructive insects have arrived. Damage
Ants will "farm" aphids for honeydew secretions and can move them from plant to plant. Winged aphids can also spread an infestation. Aphids eat more plant fluids than they can digest, excreting honeydew - a sweet, syrupy material - on leaves and stems. This attracts sooty mould, a fungus that grows in honeydew, making leaves look dirty and black. Ants are also drawn to honeydew; they feed on it, and will fiercely defend their source against predators. They will even farm aphids, moving them from plant to plant so that additional honeydew factories can be created. Traveling between plants, aphids can introduce and spread virus and disease. Control Fortunately, aphids are not difficult to eradicate. For any treatment method, repeat the procedure twice after the initial application at seven- to 10-day intervals to kill successive generations. Test any treatment on a small population of plants before widespread use. To control aphids, one must also eliminate ants. Insecticides destroy the worker ants that move and protect aphids, but the colony must be eradicated for total control. Sugar-based ant baits are recommended, as ants that farm aphids prefer sugar over fats. References Barkalow, Ray. Insect Pests: Aphids. Web article from First Rays Orchids, Doylestown, Pennsylvania. (http://www.firstrays.com/aphids.html) Hamon, Phd., Avas B. 1995. Orchid Pests. In Orchid Pests and Diseases. American Orchid Society, West Palm Beach. Page 43. Kultana Orchids. Orchid Diseases and Pests: Aphids. Web article from Kultana Orchids, Bangkok, Thailand. (http://www.orchid.in.th/pests.html) Macara Orchids. What Pest Is That? APHIDS. Web article from Macara Orchids, Masterton, New Zealand. (http://www.geocities.com/macaraorchids/Aphids.html) Mersino, Ed. Ask the Experts Database: Dendrobiums. Web article from the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii at Manoa. (http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/~experts/flowers/orchids.html) Wright, Jane. 1994. Orchid Pests and Diseases. Web article from book Growing Orchids in Canberra. P. 56. (http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Vines/7040/article.html) Susan Jones was the editor of Awards Quarterly and assistant editor of Orchids. American Orchid Society, 16700 AOS Lane, Delray Beach, Florida 33446 All reuse must contain the follwing: Reprinted from the OCTOBER 2001 issue of Orchids -- The Bulletin of the American Orchid Society. Copyright American Orchid Society -- www.aos.org |
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