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Marie Iannotti

Is Your Garden a Bug Magnet?

By , About.com GuideJuly 6, 2011

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Did you ever wonder how garden pests decide which plants they are going to destroy? Do they choose to go on cabbage binges or are they just too lazy to crawl all the way over to the other side of the garden to woof down some lettuce? About's Guide to Insects, Debbie Hadley, tackles the question of How Plant-Eating Insects Find the Right Food - a first step in how to prevent them from finding it in your garden.

Photo: © Marie Iannotti

Comments

November 12, 2008 at 1:04 pm
(1) treehugger says:

Prevent it? How typically misguided. You need to read Douglas Tallamy’s “Bringing Nature Home” Insects need to eat too- they are part of the web of life helping to provide food for birds and other organisms and pollinating the plants that provide our food.

July 6, 2011 at 10:40 am
(2) scottyblue says:

Holy smokes.Talk about misguided.

If certain insects were not controlled we could witness an agricultural and economic disaster.

I myself do not use chemicals in my garden.I use good cultural practices,companion planting,organic insecticides and I plant a lot to cover my loses.

However,I’m not feeding an entire nation as farmers are.

November 12, 2008 at 1:38 pm
(3) gardening says:

As much as I enjoy being labeled “typically misguided”, at no point did Debbie or I promote the idea of eliminating all the insects in our gardens. However a major tenant of IPM is knowing which insects are being destructive in your garden and why you are attracting so many of them.

I agree that insects are a vital part of our ecosystem, but please don’t be so quick to judge people who are trying to find a balanced way of coexisting. Let’s not forget that many garden insect problems are man-made and, left unchecked, there could be very little garden left for the other insects to enjoy.

July 19, 2009 at 1:01 pm
(4) gardenmentor says:

My garden is a favorite spot for european cabbage worm moth and chard leaf miner.

Until this year my brassicas I’ve battled the moths’ worms by picking them off my nibbled plants. This year I put up hoop houses with plastic and now (in the heat) floating row cover. The moths definitely know where their food is; they flock to the hoop house. But, they can’t get in & I have beautiful, nibble-free cabbage, kale, cauliflower & broccoli to show for it.

I did have my chard under floating row cover as well until several weeks ago. I experimented, removing the cover, to see if my plants would be okay, exposed, until a late season second hatch. Unfortunately, the flies got to the plants immediately, and I’m working around some worm-riddled leaves now.

It’s definitely a toss up — look at the beautiful plants in my garden as they grow (and are devoured by pests) or hide them under cloth and enjoy their pest-free state when I eat them. It is kind of funny, I can enjoy “the white butterflies” in my garden now that they can’t raise families in my crops!

July 20, 2009 at 12:11 pm
(5) Teresa says:

To Gardenmentor, I like your idea of hoops with plastic, how do they work, do you put the hoops over your cabbage, broccoli etc? do you provide special plants for the worms? or bad insects.?
Thanks for your idea. Have a great day!

July 20, 2009 at 3:23 pm
(6) gardening says:

I agree, the hoop idea is great. Blocking them saves so many headaches.

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