Stethorus punctillum

$48.99

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Description
TARGET PESTS:
Two-Spotted Spider Mites (Tetranychus urticae), European Red Mites (Panonychusulmi), Spruce Spider Mites (Oligonycus ununguis) and Southern Red Mites (Oligonychus ilicis).

DESCRIPTION:
Stethorus is a specialized spider mite predator in the lady beetle family. Adults are tiny, 1.5mm (1/10 inch) long, dark brown to black, oval beetles with brownish-yellow antennae, mouthparts and legs. The larvae are slow-moving, gray, with conspicuous legs. They move from plant to plant on leaves. Eggs are yellowish ovals, laid singly in or near mite colonies. Adult beetles can fly and have an unusually good ability to find small infestations of spider mites. If necessary, beetles can be stored for a few days at 10° – 16°C (50°-61°F), but longer storage will reduce egg laying and adult life span.

INTRODUCTION RATES:
Introduce a minimum of 100 adults per “hot spot”, or 10 adults per infested plant, weekly, for 3-4 weeks. Moderate Rate: 100 Stethorus per “hot spot”, or 3-4 beetles/ 10 sq.ft, weekly until established in all infested areas.

LIFESPAN:
The complete life cycle takes 14 to 20 days at 21° – 26°C (70-80 F). Female beetles lay 3 – 13 eggs per day. Over their long life span (up to 2 years), females can lay over 1000 eggs. Females must eat 20 – 40 spider mites per day to initiate and sustain egg laying. Larvae feed for 10-14 days. A single larva can consume 240 spider mites as it develops from egg to adult. Older larvae migrate down the plant to pupate and pupae are often found along leaf veins on the undersides of leaves. Adults emerge from pupae in 6-7 days. Both larvae and adult beetles feed on all stages of mites. Adults can eat over 50 mite eggs and 10 adult mites per day. If food is scarce, they will also feed on other small arthropod eggs, aphids, nectar and pollen, and will cannibalize their own species.

STRATEGIC CONSIDERATIONS:
Best control of spider mites is achieved when Stethorus is used along with predatory mites. Use care when removing leaves from infested plants. Keep any leaves with Stethorus pupae in the greenhouse one week or until adult beetles have emerged.The pesticide, fenbutatin oxide (Vendex ), can be used with Stethorus for additional control of spider mites if “hot spots” develop. It does not harm Stethorus, but avoid over-spraying, which reduces the predators’ food supply and their ability to reproduce. Spreader-stickers, supreme oils and soaps are harmful to beetles contacted by the spray, but have little residual activity.