|
 |
Aphids
All plants can be attacked by aphids. Remove the food source and they will simply find somewhere else to live. Green, brown, pink, black or yellow, aphids weaken plant growth by sucking out the juices. They cause plants to lose vigour and collapse, and new shoots to wither.
Aphids quickly multiply in hot and humid conditions, and there are even hardy types that like cold conditions. Control with Tui Eco-Pest at the first signs of them attacking plants. Make sure to spray both the top and underside of leaves.
New spring growth on citrus, stone and pip fruit, plus most berries, are particularly susceptible to aphid plagues.
|
|
 |
Codling Moth
Codling moths favourite plants include apples, nashis and pears, plums, walnuts, peaches and nectarines. Codling moth larvae can completely destroy crops as well as expose the plant to further attacks from bacteria and fungi.
The fully grown caterpillar likes to hide over winter under the bark of a tree. By mid-spring it goes to a chrysalis where it changes into a winged adult moth, emerging at the exact time of flowering for most pip and stone fruit. Adult fertilised females will lay eggs in developing apples. The caterpillars burrow into plump fruit, causing ‘maggoty’ apples.
Control often involves pest control to repel all stages of the moth. (different regions of New Zealand have different times for each stage of the cycle.) Check sprays carefully before applying, as some harmful sprays may kill bees required for pollination. Codling moth traps will use pheromone scents to attract the adults to a sticky trap. If the infestation is large on particular trees, it might pay to stick to a spray programme and then, once the tree and fruit have come back to life, try less harmful methods.
Larvae can also be trapped as it crawls over the trunks and branches of the tree. Wrap pieces of corrugated cardboard around the limbs so you can pinpoint the location of the larvae. These pieces of cardboard can be burnt and replaced weekly to slowly rid the tree of the initial problem. Pyrethrum and peppermint are also reportedly beneficial to spray onto the fruiting tree.
|
 |
Grass grub beetle
Often described as brown beetles, these grubs are native to New Zealand and cause much damage to grapes, cherries and chestnut trees. Although the grubs happily eat grasses and the roots of small shrubs, thanks to horticultural and pastoral plantings they have also developed a taste for nearly all fruit tree roots.
The adults will hatch between October and January, depending on where you live, and are often found wandering near a barbecue or glowing candles in the evenings, attracted by light. Adult grass grub beetles can devour a range of foliage and fruit, causing raised bumps on the outside of the fruit skins. The females lay eggs in the soil to pupate over winter, ready for the change in temperature.
|
 |
Green vegetale bug
These big, fat, green bugs that like to walk all over your garden are sometimes called stink beetles or green shield beetles. Green vegetable bug families will invade a whole plant. Hard, corky growths on tomatoes and tamarillos where the fruit has been pierced are evidence that green vegetable bugs have been around.
The best method to deter the infestation, though not for the squeamish, is to squash one bug.
|
|
 |
Ladybirds
Ladybirds can provide a service and eat aphids off infested plants. Both red and-black and steel-blue ladybirds are beneficial in this way. However, one yellow-and-black ladybird is not a helpful insect. Often called ‘mildew ladybirds’, yellow-and-black ladybirds are particularly common in autumn and early winter, when mildew spores are prevalent because of warmish days and cool nights. Treat the leaves of the plant with Tui Eco-Fungicide to alter the pH of the leaf’s surface, thereby cutting off the ladybirds’ food supply.
|
|
 |
Leaf roller caterpillar
There are a number of different caterpillars that roll, web and tie up leaves on fruit trees. Typically, the adult moth lays eggs and the larvae that hatch out can damage the leaves, fruit and buds of plants. Young larvae are found on the tips of new leaves, where they make a silk web that rolls the leaf into a tube. Leaf rollers are difficult to control because they are so well protected by the leaves they roll up in.
Pesticide sprays can be used. Ensure the plant is thoroughly sprayed to treat bad infestations. These are best applied in autumn rather than spring, to avoid harming beneficial insects at blossom time. Parasitic wasps will eat the caterpillars and pupae and it is also effective to squash by hand any caterpillars you see. Organic sprays like neem oil are beneficial if applied regularly.
|
|
 |
Lemon tree borer
Lemon tree borer can cause a lot of bother to fruiting crops. They appear at night when they fly about looking for mates, but can go looking for lights so will end up in outside candles and light features. They will attack plants, such as citrus, grapes, walnuts, gooseberries, figs and tamarillos, and they have a particular fondness for citrus wood.
The adults can be found any time between spring and summer. This is the reproductive stage of their life cycle. They lay their eggs on branches and twigs and on hatching, the larvae bore into the stems. A good sign that your citrus is under attack is a light sawdust falling into the cracks and bottom of the tree.
The borer is difficult to control with sprays because larvae are well protected by the stems of the plant. Pruning back branches that are infested is the only method to prevent the borer from spreading. In severe cases, where the whole plant is affected, the plant will have to be removed and destroyed.
|
|

|
Mealy bugs
Mealy bugs are easy to spot as the adults are covered in a white, fluffylooking substance. These sap-sucking insects cause significant damage to the plants they feed on. Mealy bugs most like to infest citrus trees, but can affect grapes, pineapples and kiwifruit and are often found on indoor, balcony and greenhouse fruit and fruit ornamentals. They enjoy warm, humid, sheltered places, reaching their peak in summer and autumn.
Mealy bugs have piercing mouthparts to suck sugar-rich plant sap and excrete a white, waxy honeydew that is hard to shift. The leaves will become distorted and stunted.
Until recently, systemic insecticides containing heavy-duty chemicals were the only control methods that worked well. However, eco-friendly, mineral-oil alternatives like Tui Eco-Pest or neem oil are now available. Repeat sprays may be needed. Parasitic wasps are also good hunters, feeding on the young pupae.
|
|
 |
Planthoppers
These little insects jump when disturbed or touched. Young hoppers, or ‘fluffy bums’, have a long fluffy tail of thin nylon-like fibres that helps to break their fall should they falter in their jumping.
Most commonly found in warmer northern areas of the country, but also sunny microclimates like Blenheim, Marlborough and Nelson, the hoppers are attracted to fruiting plants like tamarillos, passionfruit and pepinos.
Attacked leaves show white or pale green spots. Control is tricky. The adults and larger juveniles can hop away when droplets of insecticide hurtle their way. Fly-spray compounds such as pyrethrum can sometimes work on newly hatched fluffy bums. Tui Eco-Pest is an effective and natural way to control these pests.
Another trick is to collect all the materials that host leafhopper eggs in late autumn and winter and burn them. Pruning the unnecessary twigs and tendrils of fruiting plants is a good way to remove any hidden egg sacs.
Diligent gardeners can scrape eggs off fences and trellises. Look for small tufts sticking out of wood fibres – these are the bits to prune, but burn them, don’t put them in the compost heap.
|
|
 |
Scale
Scales are hard, cuticle-covered, rapid-breeding insects found on the bark, leaves, stems and roots of a wide range of ornamentals where they suck up the sap. They exude a sticky honeydew that attracts ants and other insects. They can come in an array of colours and shapes, somewhat confusing the gardener.
A scale attack will debilitate and eventually kill a plant by sucking the sap. Their strength, however, is in their water-repellent coat. Water-based insecticides are not absorbed at all and so are ineffective against scale. The only control methods to work well previously were systemic insecticides containing heavy-duty chemicals, which were taken up by the plant. Insecticides such as these may destroy other more garden-friendly insects.
An eco-friendly alternative is to spray three times at monthly intervals with a natural-based oil such as Tui Eco-Pest. Repeat sprays may be needed. If a plant has had a massive influx, it sometimes pays to pull it out and burn the plant material.
|
|
 |
Spider mites
Spider mites are tiny and can attack the foliage of apples, plums and other fruit trees, sucking sap and causing leaves to turn a mottled yellow and fall prematurely. Mites favour hot summers. There are many different types of mites, including the the European red mite and the two-spotted spider mite, red spider mite (pictured left), and the apple spider mite.
For gentle eradication, predatory control is a favoured option: ladybirds will hunt out tiny mites, and some more harmful mites can be hunted out by other members of the mite family. Be aware that miticides contain strong chemicals, which can wipe out many different types of spider mites whether or not they are harmful. Neem oil is a good alternative. Regular sprays are beneficial but beware – some mites can become conditioned to the spray.
|
|
 |
Vinegar fly
Vinegar flies are a large family of insects grouped together under their common fondness for eating decaying fruit, and with the ability to quickly fly from fruit to fruit – and away from swatting hands. They breed every 2 or 3 days – the reason why there are always plenty around.
The best way to remove vinegar flies before they plague every piece of fruit in your house and garden is to remove the food source. Cover the fruit bowl or keep fruit in the fridge. Discard any old and rotting fruit immediately; cut any rotting fruit from tree branches, and dispose of any fruit that drop to the ground. Vinegar flies can also be trapped with simple vinegar traps. Vinegar flies will only appear where rotting fruit exists.
|
|
 |
Whitefly
These are tiny, white, moth-like and incredibly destructive pests. Both the adults and the larvae are sap feeders and cause damage similar to that caused by aphids. They have the potential to inflict significant damage if not controlled.
They can be controlled by spraying with Tui Eco-Pest. Frequent applications will be necessary if a heavy infestation has developed. You could also try garlic spray, or a few dressings of neem oil, or even soapy water from the washing machine. If whitefly insects have infested cucurbits such as melons, spray with Tui Eco-Pest only.
A good spray with a hose every day up and under the leaves can help deter the whitefly from settling, and chemical-based sprays applied in autumn can kill the larvae and therefore stop the spread. |