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Mealybug Control

Mealybug Infestation On Houseplant

How to Get Rid of Mealybugs Naturally 

Mealybug control starts with understanding how these soft-bodied insects spread and damage plants. The most effective mealybug management strategies use Integrated Pest Management (IPM) programs. IPM integrates cultural methods, monitoring, physical barriers, biological controls, and mild treatments as necessary. NaturesGoodGuys offers natural mealybug control to treat mealybug infestations.

 

What are Mealybugs?

Mealybugs are small, soft-bodied insects covered in a white, cottony wax coating. If you've spotted white fuzzy bugs on your houseplants or white cottony clusters on your outdoor plants, mealybugs are most likely the culprit.

These pests can quickly become a serious problem in gardens, greenhouses, and on indoor plants. They feed on plant sap, weakening the plants health. Like soft scale insects, they produce a honeydew, which leads to black sooty mold and attracts ants (ants will protect the mealybug colony from natural predators).

Mealybugs thrive in warm weather, in areas without cold winters, and on indoor plants. 

Mealybug Close Up

 

Signs of a Mealybug Infestation

Knowing what mealybugs look like, and where to find them, makes a difference in how manageable the problem becomes. Mealybugs look like tiny white or gray oval insects coated in a fluffy, powdery wax. They often hid in hard-to-spot places, such as leaf nodes, the undersides of leaves, and along plant stems.

Be aware that mealybugs are sometimes confused with other pests that have a waxy coating. These include cottony cushion scale, woolly aphids, some soft scale insects, and whiteflies.

Common mealybug infestation signs: 

  • White, cottony clusters on stems, leaf joints, or undersides of leaves
  • Sticky honeydew residue on plant surfaces
  • Black sooty mold growing on honeydew
  • Distorted, stunted, or wilting new growth
  • Yellowing or dropping leaves
  • Presence of ants
  • Premature fruit or leaf drop


Common plants mealybugs infest outdoors: 

  • Citrus
  • Grapes
  • Bird of paradise
  • Cactus
  • Cypress
  • Fuchsia
  • Hibiscus


Common plants mealybugs infest indoors:

  • Aglaonema
  • Coleus
  • Dracaena
  • Ferns
  • Ficus
  • Orchids
  • Palms
  • Poinsettia


Life Cycle

Most adult female meallybugs lay 100-200 eggs in cottony egg sacs on plants, except for the long tailed mealybug, which bears live nymphs. Newly hatched nymphs, called crawlers, are yellow-ish, orange-ish, or pink-ish. They lack wax and are mobile. Once they settle down to feed, they begin to excrete a waxy covering.

The crawler stage is the most susceptible to both biological and chemical controls. Many mealybug species can also reproduce a-sexually, meaning a single female can reproduce and create an infestation. 

Flying Male Mealybugs

Female mealybugs are wingless and remain on plants, becoming immobile after the crawler stage. In contrast males pass through a pupal stage and eventually develop wings.  They are tiny, often unnoticed, and have two wings resembling a fly. 

 

Mealybugs & Ants: The Hidden Partnership

Just like many sap-sucking soft-bodied insects, ants actively farm mealybugs for their honeydew. Ants will protect mealybug colonies from natural predators like Cryptolaemus. Managing ant activity before releasing beneficial insects is one of the most important, and overlooked, step in mealybug control.

 

Cultural Strategies

Cultural methods aim to establish an environment that benefits plants while being less inviting to pests. Keeping soil healthy, rotating crops, using mulch, and companion planting are good practices. Because adult female mealybugs do not fly, they spread slowly and are most commonly introduced on new plants, tools, or pots.

 

Physicial / Mechanical Control

Physical barriers and hands-on methods are a valuable first line of defense before an infestation builds. We offer several products to help:

  • Beneficial Insect Netting to keep the good bugs in and the bad bugs out.
  • Diatomaceous Earth to create unfavorable conditions for soft-bodied pest insects.
  • Yellow Sticky Traps monitor adult male populations and helps detect new infestations early.

 

Biological Control

Mealybugs are difficult to control with insecticides because their waxy coating repels most contact sprays. Also, their habit of hiding makes them hard to reach. This is what makes beneficial insects for mealybug control such a necessary part of any organic management strategy. 

General Predators

Insects like green lacewings, ladybugs and Orius target their prey by eating mealybugs whole or extracting body fluids.

  • Ladybugs are great at managing aphids, mealybugs, whiteflies, mites, thrips, and more.
  • Green Lacewing Larvae are effective against aphids, small caterpillars, mealybugs, whiteflies, mites, scale, thrips, and more.
  • Orius insidiosus (Minute Pirate Bug) targets all life stages of thrips, mites, moth eggs, aphids, and more.

Targeted Mealybug Control - Mealybug Destroyer

Cryptolaemus montrouzieri, commonly known as the Mealybug Destroyer beetle, is a specialist lady beetle and the most powerful targeted mealybug predator available. It manages citrus, comstock, obscure, solenopsis, Mexican, long-tailed, and many other mealybug species. The beetle lays its eggs directly in mealybug egg masses, and the larvae feed on all mealybug life stages.

Mealybug or Cryptolaemus Larvae?

Mealybug Destroyer larvae disguise themselves as mealybugs while feeding on them, then emerge as hungry adult predators. Older Cryptolaemus larvae have a white wax covering, but they are larger in size than mealybugs. Inspect any white mass carefully before treating to avoid removing your biological control. 

Cryptolaemus montrouzieri Life Cycle

When to Release?

Introduce Cryptolaemus montrouzieri early in the growing season, or at first sight of a mealybug on indoor plants. Manage any ant activity before release. Early introductions allow predators to establish themselves and manage mealybugs before they cause significant plant damage.

 

Soft Chemical Control

You can often manage light infestations with monitoring and releasing beneficial insects early. For moderate infestations, use a combination of beneficial insects and targeted treatments. Severe infestations need soft chemical knockdown for aphid treatment, then a release of beneficial insects to prevent re-infestation. We offer gentle chemical solutions, including:

  • Neem oil disrupts mealybug feeding and development.
  • Horticulture oils suffocates exposed mealybugs and eggs on contact.
  • Insecticidal soap penetrate the mealybug's waxy outer layer, causing dehydration
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