From: sasjwm@zymurgy.unx.sas.com (Jim McKenzie) Subject: Re: Good Flowers for Good Bugs Date: Thu, 7 May 1992 17:58:54 GMT I have read the following information about "flower power." I can only verify that Yarrow does attract Ladybugs. Can anyone else verify the benefits of the other flowers? These attract these which eat these Flowers Good Bugs Bad Bugs ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Evening Primrose Ground Beetle Cankerworms, snails, slugs, moths, maggots, houseflies gnats, aphids, ants, termites Wild Buckwheat Tachinid Fly Caterpillars, adult beetles, gypsy moths, grasshoppers Baby Blue Eyes Syrphid Fly Aphids, thrips, leafhoppers, Candy Tuft mealybugs Bishops Flower various insects Cutworms, mealbugs, aphids, Black-eye Susan scale insects, beetle larvae, Strawflowers gypsy moths, caterpillars Nasturtiums Angelica Green Lace Wings Aphids, caterpillars eggs, mites, mealybugs, thrips, whiteflies Yarrow Ladybugs Aphids, mealybugs, chinch bugs, === From: aok@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu (Ann Kamman) Date: 7 May 92 19:54:32 GMT Here are some examples from the charts in the Garbage magazine I recently told you about: Good Flowers for Good Bugs ALYSSUM. attracts tachinids, syrphids, chalcids. Note: research underway in Calif with rows of alyssum between rows of lettuce to build up pupulations of aphid-predators. ANGELICA. attracts ladybugs, lacewings, potter, mud-dauber, sandwasps. Note: cut back flowers before seed matures. Cut foliage to ground in fall. Likes fertile soil. MORNING GLORY. attracts syrphid flies, ladybugs. Note: invasive. WHITE CLOVER. attracts parasitic wasps of aphids, scales, and whiteflies. Note: excellent nitrogen fixer. Start seed in warmth of summer. Good as a lawn substitute, except it attracts honey bees. WILD LETTUCE. attracts soldier beetles, lacewings, earwigs, syrphid flies. Note: wild relative of our cultivated lettuces. Prefers fertile soil, easy to control. YARROW. attracts ladybugs; parasitic wasps of aphids, scales, and whiteflies. Note: very drought resistant, comes in many hot and pastel colors of bloom. Predators and Parasites SYRPHID FLIES. Prey on aphids, leafhoppers, mealy-bugs. Most hungry in larval stage. LACEWINGS. Prey on aphids, scale, whiteflies, mites, other lacewings, mealybugs, and the eggs of mites, thrips, and other insects. Most hungry in larval stage. PRAYING MANTIDS [sic]. Eat any insect they catch, including beneficial ones. Most hungry in adult, nymph stages. DRAGONFLIES. Eat small flying insects, including midges and mosquitoes. Most hungry when adult. SOLDIER BEETLES. Feed on cutworms, gypsy moth larvae, cankerworms, snails, and slugs. Most hungry as adult. _________ Another fascinating paragraph: "Consider the ladybug. We all know and love the adult ladybug with its red-and-black spotted dome. This beneficial insect is commonly sold as a useful predator of aphids and mealybugs, pests which rob the plant of sap and damage the foliage. But the gardener's best friend is really the ladybug larva. This spiny, orange-black creature is so ugly that most people, assuming it's a pest, destroy an important compatriot. Ladybug larvae are some of the most ravenous and effective aphid-eating creatures Nature has devised. They greedily gobble young aphids, called nymphs, as well as adult aphids."