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Which are the most beneficial insects? We鈥檙e talking about bugs that are good for your garden because they eat plant pests! Find out which plants and flowers attract pollinators and other beneficial insects.
What Are Beneficial Insects?
The average backyard is home to thousands of insects, but you may be surprised to learn that only about a tenth of these are destructive. In fact, most are either beneficial or harmless. Beneficial insects fall into three main categories:
Pollinators: We depend on these insects鈥攊ncluding bees, butterflies, flies, and moths鈥攖o pollinate our garden鈥檚 flowers.
Predators: These insects eliminate pests by eating them. Ladybugs, praying mantids, and green lacewing larvae fall into this category.
Parasitizers: Like predators, parasitizers also prey upon other insects, but in a slightly different way. They lay their eggs on or in the bad bugs, and when the eggs hatch, the larvae feed on the host insects. Parasitic wasps are the main members of this category.
Meet the Beneficial Bugs in Your Backyard
Everyone knows their bees from their butterflies, but what about the many other beneficial bugs? Likely, you鈥檝e already seen these good guys in your garden, but maybe you weren鈥檛 formally introduced. Here are a few you might want to become acquainted with:
Despite their delightful name and appearance, ladybugs are ferocious predators! Before they get their bright red colors, they start out life as larvae (pictured below), cruising around on plants and feasting on aphids. Did you know that a ladybug larva can eat up to 40 aphids an hour?
Green Lacewings
Adult green lacewings feed on pollen and nectar, but their larvae, which look like a mix between a slug and an alligator, prey upon soft-bodied garden pests, including caterpillars and aphids.
Praying Mantids
A praying mantis will make short work of any grasshoppers troubling you; these fierce predators will also hunt many other insect pests that terrorize gardens, including moths, beetles, and flies. Note, however, that praying mantids are ruthless and will also eat other beneficial creatures, like butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds鈥攁nd even each other!
Spiders
Spiders鈥攖hough technically arachnids rather than insects鈥攁re often overlooked as beneficial, but they are very effective pest controllers. Since they are attracted to their prey by movement, they eat many live insects. Jumping spiders and wolf spiders (pictured) are especially good at keeping pests under control.
Ground Beetles
鈥淕round beetles鈥 is the name of a large group of predatory beetles that are beneficial as both adults and larvae. They will eat a wide range of insects, including nematodes, caterpillars, thrips, weevils, slugs, and silverfish. While insects like Japanese beetles should be controlled in the garden, don鈥檛 crush every beetle you see!
Soldier Beetles
Soldier beetles are an important predator of Mexican bean beetles, Colorado potato beetles, caterpillars, and aphids. Like many beneficial bugs, they are attracted to plants that have compound blossoms, such as Queen Anne鈥檚 lace and yarrow.
Assassin Bugs
Assassin bugs look like a strange mix between a praying mantis and a squash bug. They use their sharp mouthparts to prey upon many different types of insect pests in the garden. They can be mistaken for squash bugs in their adult form, so look carefully before you squish something!
Robber Flies
With their extra-long legs, robber flies are bug-eating machines that we鈥檙e thankful to have on our side. They may look intimidating, but unlike horseflies, they do not attack humans (although they can bite when threatened). Instead, they go after a number of common garden pests. Try not to shoo this fly!
Hoverflies
Another good fly in your garden, the hoverfly, looks like a tiny yellowjacket without a stinger. They feed on pollen and nectar and are crucial pollinators. Their larvae are voracious predators, killing aphids, caterpillars, beetles, and thrips by sucking the juice from their victims.
Parasitic Wasps
Parasitic wasps are very tiny, so you probably won鈥檛 see them at work. However, they are very effective in pest control.
Braconid wasps lay their eggs on the backs of tomato hornworms and other caterpillars, forming those white cocoons you see on the caterpillar鈥檚 back (pictured below). If you see a parasitized caterpillar, don鈥檛 kill it. Instead, move it to elsewhere in your garden. The wasp larvae will take care of them for you and turn into more wasps, who will continue to do their good work in your tomato patch.
Trichogramma wasps are minuscule wasps (several of them can fit on the head of a pin) that lay their eggs inside the eggs of over 200 different insect pests, preventing the pests鈥 eggs from ever hatching in the first place.
The tachinid fly looks like just a small housefly but is an active parasitizer of corn borers, gypsy moth caterpillars, grasshoppers, Japanese beetles, Mexican bean beetles, squash bugs, and green stinkbugs.
Attracting Beneficial Insects
Like all living creatures, beneficial insects have a basic need for water, food, and shelter. By providing these things, your garden will become an inviting home for them.
A diversity of plants will attract a wide range of insects. Many beneficials appear in the garden before the pests do, and they need alternative food sources such as pollen and nectar if they are to stick around.
Early-blooming plants, especially ones with tiny blossoms like alyssum, or biennials such as carrots or parsley that have been left to bloom, will help draw beneficials to your yard in the spring.
Later, they will be especially attracted to plants with compound blossoms, such as yarrow, goldenrod, and Queen Anne鈥檚 lace, and flowering herbs like lavender, mint, sage, dill, fennel, and lemon balm.
Remember that if you resort to using chemical pesticides to control insects, you will often kill good and bad bugs alike. Even the so-called 鈥渘atural鈥 pesticides like pyrethrum and rotenone will kill many beneficial insects.
In her book writes, 鈥淓very insect has a mortal enemy. Cultivate that enemy, and he will do your work for you.鈥
I've found planting a small patch (or a few rows) of buckwheat, even in a flower garden, attracts a heap of beneficials. Most are very small bees/wasps that love-love-love the teeny tiny blossoms of buckwheat.
Watch out for this very invasive "grass". Destroys a good lawn almost instantly. Badly need controls for this weed. Any suggestions will be appreciated. Using a weed& grass killer by the gallons and killing my good grass along with the bad.
Thank you for your candid "short list" commentary & pictures -- but I can't help but wish you had included pics of both the adult AND larval forms of these useful critters, instead of only one or the other (as in, the lacewing -- the larval form eats caterpillars but you show a pic of the adult).
Maybe I'm crazy (pretty certain of that), but I mow around my yellow-jackets nests in the ground, leave them a few feet of tall grass around their entrances, and I enjoy a lot less bugs because these guys are out foraging for them all day long.
I let them "bee" as much as I can. Boy, do they pack a very painful sting. I hate them, but they serve a purpose too. I don't know how many I've saved from drowning in my pool. Call me nuts too! 馃お
Some weeds like horse radish and dandelion can have roots as deep as 4 ft. If you attempt to pull them out some rootlets will snap off and regrow. My solution is to cut the weed at the soil line and invert an empty tin can over it and then stamp it flush with the ground, wait a season and all will be dead. In the case of horse radish it may take longer, that depends on the size of the tuber which can be 2 inches in diameter and several feet long. I have not yet tried this on blackberries. Will someone please try it and let me know. TA
While there is a lot of truth in what you say, there are aspects, such as the wasps that deal to many butterfly species. In southern New Zealand it is not easy to attract beneficials to an urban garden. The aphids of asclepiads ignore pyrethrum daisies, nasturtiums and other 'attractants'.
Breeding beneficials is as big a task as the object of conserving butterflies!