Ways to control thrips pests on indoor plants


Thrips on indoor plants are quite a common occurrence, further complicated by the fact that this insect is indiscriminate in terms of food. It successfully sucks juices from any species, without exception. This not only negatively affects the development of the flower, but can also lead to its death.

In addition, the pest multiplies quite quickly, which complicates its removal. It is important to know about measures to combat existing pests and how to protect indoor flowers from thrips invasion.

How to fight thrips on houseplants

Thrips on indoor plants: how to fight them in this protracted war? Agree, you don’t always win the battle with a pest. Thrips, unpleasant and dangerous insects, have many species that differ significantly from each other not only in size, but also in color. They attack the plant mainly with their numbers, because each individual reproduces every 6 days, doubling the colony. Therefore, the fight against them is difficult and lengthy. It seems that all the thrips have been destroyed, but after a couple of weeks they again draw all the juices out of the plant. The flower weakens and withers right before our eyes.

Mr. Summer resident informs: preventive measures

It is always easier to prevent any disease than to treat it. Therefore, you should listen to these simple tips:

  • proper care should be provided to all indoor plants;
  • should be watered regularly, not allowing the soil to dry out - thrips do not tolerate high humidity;
  • for the same reason, it is necessary to regularly spray the flowers, creating a humid microclimate;
  • When purchasing a new plant, be sure to carefully examine it for any types of diseases;
  • try to install mosquito nets on windows, although they are not always able to protect against these pests.

What do thrips look like?

The most numerous insect pest species is thrips. Their size ranges from 0.5 mm to 5 mm. The color can also range from transparent milky individuals to black. The body is oblong, has two wings with a fringe characteristic of these insects located along the edge of the wing.

Indoor thrips species have a size of 1-1.5 mm. The appearance of insects can vary significantly even within the same species.

thrips varieties

The laid larvae are similar in appearance to the adults, but their color is usually translucent white or light yellow. They do not have wings, unlike adult insects. The most common and well-known types:

  1. Frankliniella intonsa is a multivorous thrips that damages the developing ovaries and flowers of the plant.
  2. Hercinothrips femoralis is an ornamental thrips that likes to settle on large plants such as amaryllis, chrysanthemums, callas, cacti and gardenias.
  3. Parthnothrips dracaenoe - dracaena thrips, spoils aralia, tradescantia, dracaena, hibiscus; Thrips fuscipennis - This thrips prefers forbs.
  4. Thrips tabaci - tobacco thrips; its name makes its preferences clear.
  5. Liothrips vaneeckei is an onion thrip that loves to eat gladioli bulbs.

Insects feed on the sap of the plants on which they settle. The paths that they gnaw in the tissues of leaves eventually become visible to the naked eye. In room conditions, the number of individuals doubles every 6 days.

Thrips pest - description

The length of the black, brown or gray body of thrips reaches from 0.5 to 3 mm, some species are much larger - about 14 mm. The legs of thrips are running, the mouthparts are asymmetrical, piercing-sucking, and the paws are without claws, but are equipped with teeth and a bubble-like suction device. The abdomen of thrips consists of 11 segments. There is fringe along the edges of the wings. Thrips develop through five stages: eggs, larvae, pronymphs, nymphs and adults. Thrips larvae have a grayish or white-yellow body, otherwise they differ from adults only in the absence of wings.

Thrips are polyphages, that is, omnivorous insects. They are one of the most common pests of agricultural, vegetable, fruit, ornamental and indoor crops. They pose a particular danger to plants indoors: if thrips are infested in greenhouses, it is very difficult to get rid of them; you can only contain their population numbers. It is difficult to detect these pests due to their small size and secretive lifestyle: they can parasitize one plant for a long time without spreading to neighboring ones.

Adults and larvae suck the sap from the above-ground parts of the plant and infect them with their secretions. First, discolored or yellowish spots, streaks or stripes appear at the bite sites, which gradually merge. As a result of the activity of pests, plant tissue dies, holes form in place of the spots, leaves wither and fall off, flowers lose their decorative effect and fall off prematurely. When a plant is massively occupied by thrips, silvery areas appear on its ground organs, the stems are bent, and the flowers are deformed due to the fact that the pests have damaged the flower buds. On top of that, thrips are carriers of incurable viral diseases.

  • Aphids on cucumbers are not a death sentence: 3 simple ways to fight without chemicals

Thrips on indoor flowers

Thrips love “thoroughbred” plants. Flowers such as:

  • rose;
  • dracaena;
  • ficus;
  • laurel;
  • monstera;
  • lemon;
  • palm.

Although the insect can feed on any indoor plant. When infected with these harmful insects, the leaves of the plant begin to lighten. Numerous punctures appear from the thrips' voracious trunk.

plant leaf affected by thrips

At the same time, brown spots appear on the inside of the leaf. When insects attack a plant, they destroy the leaves and begin to die. Flower buds become deformed and inflorescences take on ugly shapes.

Criminal traces! If you carefully examine an indoor flower, you will see pollen spilling out from the stamens of the flowers on the leaves. This is a clear sign that a colony of thrips has settled on the plant. Although this can happen when the flower is shaken or infected by one of the types of mites.

To recognize the cause of pollen shedding and make sure that thrips are present or absent, pick a flower. Tap it lightly with a pencil or ballpoint pen on a dark-colored sheet of paper. This method will show whether the plant is infested with pests.

You can also experimentally determine what type of “beast” has settled on your pet. Perhaps a greenhouse or ornamental thrips has settled on the flower. Symptoms of thrips and flat mite infestations are very similar. But please note that thrips are harsher than ticks.

Over time, these pests will turn your gorgeous pet into an obvious ragamuffin with terrible “scars” on the leaves and barely alive flowers that are in the last stage of exhaustion. Petals speckled with dark and light spots, half-withered and deformed flowers evoke pity, not delight, when looking at them.

There are also types of thrips that have only one generation per year; these are usually local species brought into the home by the wind, or with flowers from the garden plot. Such species are peaceful in nature and will disappear from the “battlefield” by autumn.

You should be afraid of the appearance of California thrips on house flowers, a very harmful eater of indoor specimens.

Morphology and biology of the pest

Recognizing thrips is not that difficult. They look like small insects with an elongated body up to 2 mm long, light yellow, black or dark brown. Adults usually have two pairs of wings with long hairs.

The larvae of the pest have a light yellow body and do not exceed 1 mm in length. An additional clue about the presence of thrips can be the nature of their movement: adult individuals move very quickly, often making sharp jumps using their belly.

The difference between males and females is that the former have a slimmer, but not so long body. They are also painted in different colors.

Thrips can also be distinguished by their wings: in some species they can be quite short, in others they may not be at all. Thrips are one of many groups of pests that include more than 2,000 species. About 200 species live in our country.

Their main habitats are leaves, flowers and buds of indoor plants. They feed on nectar and sap from leaf tissue. Thrips are dangerous because they reproduce very quickly. Leaf tissue or flowers are used as a site for laying eggs.

After just 10 days, new offspring emerge from the eggs. However, it takes one month for the larvae to develop into adult insects.

At this moment, a great threat appears for plants, since as a result of the activity of pests they lose their attractiveness and begin to be affected by viral diseases. Over time, when insects drink all the juices from one plant, they move on to others located nearby.

So what are flower thrips? As we have already said, this is a small insect, usually one and a half millimeters long, but there are adults with a length of up to two and a half millimeters. Their wings are folded behind their backs; in a calm state, they form a light, narrow strip that is barely visible.

Adults are brownish, black or sandy in color, young ones are greenish, whitish, yellow. It is thanks to their camouflage coloring that these insects hide well and are difficult to detect.

The larvae do not have wings, they are small; quite a lot of effort must be made to detect and destroy them. Most insects hide among the stamens of the flower, in the axils of the leaves, so if you notice the first signs of damage, inspect your plant very carefully. The sooner you take action, the better for your pet.

When deciding how to deal with thrips on flowers, you must first become familiar with them and their biology in a little more detail. The biggest difficulty is their small size, several stages of development and virtually imperviousness to chemicals.

A single treatment of a plant can only slightly reduce the number of pests, but it will not be possible to completely remove them in one go.

Therefore, when fighting insects, it is recommended to divide the entire period into several parts, gradually destroying the pests. We also take into account that the eggs are not affected during processing, since they are located directly in the leaf tissue. Therefore, it is necessary to remove the affected leaves and carefully examine the remaining ones. Fighting thrips with pesticides may also not be successful, since they adapt well to any poisons.

At the larval stage, insects are generally inaccessible; they simply bury themselves in the ground near the root system, where there is no way to get them. Typically, two to three times the concentration of insecticides is required to cope with insects, which are incredibly resistant compared to other pests. The most stringent control measures are required here.

Common types of thrips

The first information about the existence of thrips was received back in 1744, when these pests were discovered by Karl de Geer. Today, people have become more aware of the species diversity of these pests, among which there are special species that infect ornamental plants more often than others:

  • Western floral
  • The length of an adult insect is about 2 mm, the color can vary from light yellow to brown-yellow. California thrips prefer to live on buds and flowers, but the population can also reproduce on leaves.

    California thrips are dangerous because they carry the tomato virus, which gives tomato leaves a bronze color. Western flower thrips is considered a very broadly polyphagous species.

    It can feed on peppers, cucumbers, onions, tomatoes, grapes, peaches, strawberries and many other fruit and vegetable crops, as well as numerous ornamental and flower plants: gerberas, roses, daisies, chrysanthemums, Saintpaulias, cineraria, cyclamens.

    Western flower thrips larvae and adults suck cell sap from plant tissue. This first causes the appearance of yellow spots on the buds, leaves or fruits, streaking; Gradually, plant tissues die in these affected areas.

    Damage to flower buds in vegetable and fruit crops causes deformation of flowers and fruits.

    For example, severe curling of flowers and curling of the fruits of a cucumber are a common sign that thrips has settled on the plant. When roses are infested with Western flower thrips, damaged buds do not open and dry out.

  • Tobacco
  • This pest lives in the middle zone and southern regions of our country. Here it is found on various ornamental plants grown in greenhouses and greenhouses. The insect itself is small, reaching a length of no more than 1 mm, and has a light yellow or brown color.

  • Decorative
  • It is most widespread in the northern regions and central zone of our country. Poses a threat to many indoor plants.

    Orchids, monstera, dieffenbachia and certain types of palm trees suffer the most from this pest. It can be identified by its dark brown color, as well as a small body that is 1.5-2 mm long.

  • Dracaena
  • Adult insects are about 1.3 mm long, females are yellow-brown in color, the male is slightly smaller and lighter. The larvae are white. This type of thrips is also a large polyphagous plant and is found on the leaves of a very large number of species of ornamental plants: orchids, monstera, aralia, tradescantia, anthurium, hibiscus, ficus, dracaena, palms and many others.

    Under natural conditions, dracaena thrips is found in tropical and subtropical countries. In more northern latitudes it is widely distributed on plants in closed ground (in greenhouses, greenhouses).

    In industrial greenhouse conditions, it is almost impossible to destroy thrips. At best, their numbers are kept to a level that would not affect the commercial quality of the products (flowers, fruits, vegetables).

    This is due to the fact that thrips have a very high adaptation to pesticides. This is especially true for individuals that feed on flowers.

  • Divorceous (common)
  • This species is represented in most of our country. The main food for it is flowers and buds of indoor plants. It looks like a dark brown insect, reaching a length of just over 1 mm.

  • Rose thrips
  • Its favorite habitats are rosaceous plants. A characteristic feature is a brown body, reaching 1 mm in length.

  • Bulb thrips
  • This species is represented in most of our country. Most often it can be found among the scales of lily plants. It can be identified by its dark brown color and body up to 2 mm long.

  • American
  • The insect is dark brown or brown in color, from 1.3 mm (males) to 1.6 mm (females) in length. Echinothrips americana prefers to live mainly on leaves, in the tissue of which females lay their eggs. This type of thrips was discovered in the nineties of the last century in Holland at one of the popular flower auctions, to which plants are brought from all over the world.

    Initially, thrips was discovered on orchids. Nowadays, American thrips are transported from country to country on cut flowers, seedlings, and ornamental potted plants.

    American thrips activity is first visible by the appearance of yellow spots. The presence of ten thrips on one leaf is enough for it to begin to fade. 30-40 thrips individuals will lead to drying out and leaf fall, which begins from the lower tier. And although thrips do not directly lead to plant death, they significantly reduce the decorative value of flowers.

    In search of food, thrips move to flowers and fruits or to neighboring plants and continue their life activities there. Due to the fact that the population of American thrips is spreading very quickly, there is a high probability of its spread not only on all floral and ornamental plants, but also on other vegetable crops grown in greenhouses.

  • Black thrips
  • Adult insects are about 1-1.5 mm long, dark brown or almost black in color with a brownish-brown abdomen and yellowish fore wings. The larvae are white or yellowish, differ from adults in being slightly smaller in size and lacking wings.

    Adult insects and black thrips larvae usually live on the underside of leaves. The nature of plant damage is almost the same as that caused by tobacco thrips.

    In closed ground (in greenhouses, greenhouses), black thrips is ubiquitous and reproduces all year round. Harm is caused by both adult insects and black thrips larvae, causing great damage to cucumbers, tomatoes, other vegetable and green crops, as well as potted and ornamental plants. Black thrips overwinters well in the top layer of soil under plant debris or in compost heaps.

    What indoor plants do insects appear on?

    These insects are omnivores and live on any plants. Their favorite indoor flowers are violets, ficus, lemons, begonias, roses, orchids and dracaenas. Thrips cause particular harm to violets, damaging the flowers.

    The plant stops blooming and loses its decorative appearance.

    The most favorable climate for insects is warm and dry air. They can appear in any home, but they actively reproduce most often in places where the plants are not sprayed or rarely watered.

    How to detect and signs of flower infection

    If, during the inspection of indoor plants, you find that some leaves have become discolored, and there are also many spots on them caused by punctures, then this is a clear sign that thrips have appeared in your apartment. If you pay attention to the lower part of the leaves, you can find brownish or brownish spots there.

    Damaged areas often turn silvery, which can be explained by air entering the cells.

    If prompt treatment measures are not taken at the first signs of thrips activity, the foliage will subsequently die and flowers and buds will become deformed. Insects cause additional harm by depositing sticky secretions, which provide a favorable environment for the development of sooty fungus.

    Although thrips are not picky about their food, their most preferred indoor plants are violets, begonias, roses, citrus fruits, orchids and ficus. Violets suffer most from thrips larvae, as they destroy the anther of the flower.

    At the first signs of their appearance, it is necessary to pick off all flowers and buds over the next 1.5 months, combining this with treatment with suitable preparations.

    Unfortunately, the presence of insects is often discovered when the plant has already died. They hide in the axils of leaves and pistils of flowers. If you carefully examine the plant, you can find the following signs of thrips infestation:

    1. Small brown dots on the leaves are places from which insects drank juice;
    2. Many leaves darken, die, become discolored or become covered with gray stripes, and they may also be covered with lacy netting;
    3. Brown spots are visible on the underside of the leaf blade;
    4. Young leaves and shoots grow small and deformed;
    5. The flowers quickly dry out and fall off.
    6. Almost all insects that parasitize indoor plants are sucking. Thrips are no exception; with their thin proboscis they penetrate the leaf of a plant and suck out the juice from it.

    How to determine if a plant is infected:

  • Newly blossomed shoots are especially affected. Unlike spider mites, the effect of this parasite is not as large-scale, but it is capable of causing significant harm.
  • On the leaves where the insect is located, traces of its vital activity remain - small brown dots, which are dead areas after loss of juice.
  • During the growing season of plants, new shoots, as well as leaves and flowers, become smaller and significantly deformed. Old leaves die off and become covered with colored spots or a silvery coating.
  • The appearance of dry mesh or openwork areas is also characteristic.
  • Many consider this phenomenon to be a sunburn and try to remove the plant away from exposure to rays. However, this method will not bring results, since thrips larvae are to blame for this, destroying the leaves at great speed. Plus, accumulations of dirt appear on the flowers, which are insect excrement.

    In addition, thrips carries various viral diseases that pose a great danger to plants, as they can die.

    Parasites are characterized by the secretion of a liquid substance with a sticky consistency, which is an excellent breeding ground for sooty fungus. The most dangerous among the large number of varieties of thrips are tobacco, bulbous, herbivorous, ornamental, dracaena, rose and western flower. It is almost impossible to determine which of them affects the flowers in the apartment.

    Danger to indoor plants

    If you do not start fighting insects in time, they can completely destroy the plant. Thrips not only suck the juice from the leaves, causing them to die. They are carriers of dangerous flower diseases, such as fungus. By multiplying quickly, insects spoil the decorative appearance of the flower and, over time, completely destroy it.

    The plant fades, the leaves darken, lose their shape, and the flowers fall off. The danger of these pests is that it is very difficult to notice them; they hide in the axils of leaves or between the stamens of a flower. The larvae generally bury themselves in the ground, so many plant treatment methods do not work on them.

    Discovery of thrips on indoor plants usually occurs after the flower begins to look depressed.

    The most dangerous are considered to be decorative, Californian, tobacco, and greenhouse thrips, which are capable of transmitting various viral infections between flowers. The first sign of damage is pollen, which spills from the stamens onto the petals.

    But you should be careful, since this phenomenon can also occur when the weather is too hot, when affected by certain types of ticks. It’s quite easy to check; we pick a few flowers and shake them over black paper, after which we inspect the leaf.

    The degree of damage may vary, depending on the type of pest. For example, Californian thrips, as well as ornamental and tobacco thrips, are provoked not only on leaves, but also on flowers; the lesions are very similar to those caused by spider mites, leafhoppers, and flat beetles.

    Flowers wither, quickly become deformed, and become covered with specks of black and white.

    The surface of the leaves is similar to fabric that has been pierced many times with a needle. There is an abundance of pollen on the lower leaves. Thrips pests can enter an apartment through open windows, along with bouquets that were brought from open ground, with infected plants. Garden flowers are also susceptible to attack by pests; even unpretentious gladioli (propagation by seeds, children) and the well-known bearded irises can suffer from their harmful activities.

    Where do thrips come from?

    Forewarned is forearmed! In the summer, flower pests easily penetrate into a person’s home with gusts of wind, with soil brought from the garden plot. When buying new varieties of house plants, you also run the risk of introducing pests into your home; there is no insurance against infection spread by thrips.

    With onions brought from the dacha, California thrips gets into the house. Summer, a time of intensive exchange between gardeners with rare house plants, then? there is a danger of infection. At this time, flowers are often moved to balconies and loggias protected from the wind, but with drafts, when ventilated there is still a risk of catching thrips.

    California thrips

    Summer, heat and dry air are favorable conditions for the spread of this evil pest. He loves high summer temperatures. As the weather gets colder, the intensity of thrips distribution drops significantly.

    What crops are most often affected by thrips?

    Wheat thrips harms cereals, corn, and tobacco. Onion and tobacco love garlic, onions, nightshades, umbellifers, and melons. The heterovorous species has no special preferences; it attacks many vegetable, ornamental, and fruit and berry crops.

    The roseate species is found on rosaceous plants. The buds and inflorescences of gladioli damage gladiolus thrips, and in the fall, if the pest is not destroyed, it settles on the bottom of the bulbs and ends up in storage.

    The western flower (California) is very dangerous and omnivorous. It is a quarantine parasite that is difficult to control. In large greenhouses, this species is capable of destroying all plants. It develops faster than other species, displaces them and can form up to 12–15 generations.

    Among indoor crops, thrips severely affects ficus, palm trees, dracaenas, monsteras, citrus fruits, saintpaulias, orchids, fuchsias, aspidistras, laurel, balsam, cyclamen, gloxinia, and pelargoniums.

    Thrips control

    Whatever plants become infected with thrips, preventive measures should be taken. Strictly monitor air humidity, pests cannot tolerate moisture. In the summer, give your green pets a shower, with soap foam, preferably from baby soap. This is an almost 100% guarantee against this malicious pest.

    Be sure to conduct a visual inspection of your indoor garden once a week. You will admire your flowers and at the same time inspect them for infestation, both pests and any infection.

    Stock up on adhesive tapes to place them among the leaves of plants; this is also a preventive measure in pest control. Everyone recommends using your own ribbon color; some say that thrips are best caught on pink, while others recommend blue.

    Who claims that only the yellow color of the trap is suitable for catching pests? Thrips have wings, which means they can easily migrate from plant to plant. This is the reason for the rapid infection of green pets in the same room.

    A fight for life and death! Thrips are persistent individuals and are extremely difficult to fight, mainly because they lay eggs inside the leaf. Since they are protected by fibers, they are practically indestructible; neither pesticides nor any other means take them.

    thrips larva

    Thrips love dry, hot air; at a temperature of +20-25˚C they double their numbers every 4-5 days. Just imagine what hordes of greedy and hungry pests these are. If you don't fight them, they will destroy everything that blooms and grows in the house.

    If you find thrips on at least one plant, inspect the nearby flowers and give all your pets an urgent wash with soapy foam. This is prevention. Be sure to place the infected plant in quarantine, let it stand in a room separate from other seedlings, and you will observe it at this time.

    The place where the infected pet stood? The top layer of soil in the pot should be removed and the substrate needs to be replaced. It should also be sprayed with insecticides. Before cultivating the soil, the plant should be given a shower; this will not harm it.

    Note! Treatment with a soap solution is not a panacea; it is better to treat the plant with chemicals. Thrips are very difficult to destroy, so chemistry is better than the soap solution often used by gardeners.

    Dangerous pests of orchids

    The orchid is considered a very capricious plant. Most often, thrips are found on spathoglottis, faius, phalaenopsis, miltonia, cymbidium, catasetum and other representatives of the Orchid family. They can be attacked and harmed by thrips species:

    • Californian.
    • Tobacco.
    • American.
    • Dracaena.

    There are a number of signs by which you can identify affected flowers:

    • Silvery-white tint on the leaves.
    • Deformation of flowering stems and new shoots.

    The photo above shows thrips on orchids. The fight against them includes the following actions:

    1. Arrange a shower for the affected flowers. Try to wash away harmful insects.
    2. Isolate orchids in a separate place, away from other flowers.
    3. Monitor the room temperature.
    4. Maintain high humidity, as thrips love dry air and cannot tolerate humid air.
    5. Place sticky traps around the flowers.

    You can use folk remedies to fight thrips:

    • Use a soapy solution for spraying.
    • Garlic infusion (peel and crush 5 cloves of garlic. Pour half a liter of boiling water. Leave for 4 hours. Apply the resulting solution with a brush to the affected area).
    • Dilute olive oil (one or two tablespoons) in one liter of water and spray the orchids.

    Many chemicals are also oil-based. These drugs have a good effect on pests, but have one serious drawback. They contribute to the destruction of the leaf in the sun. Chemicals that are successfully used to kill thrips on orchids:

    • Pyrethrum powder.
    • "Celaflor".
    • “Neudorf.”
    • “Vertimek” and others.

    Plants that are subjected to chemical treatment must be moved to partial shade for a period of two weeks. It is necessary to strictly follow the instructions for use of the drug. When spraying, it is recommended to maintain a certain distance from the spray can to the flower.

    Granular preparations have shown their effect on thrips well. They are placed in the substrate. Many of these drugs contain fertilizers.

    It is especially important when using granular preparations to be able to correctly calculate the dosage. Otherwise, the orchid roots may suffer from increased amounts of salts.

    Treating orchids once is not enough. It is necessary to repeat the procedure after 5-7 days.

    Remedies for thrips

    In war, all means are good! Products used for spraying plants often require additional actions, such as covering the flower with a plastic bag for a day. So, get to know these drugs:

    1. Vertimek - dilute 2.5 ml of the drug in 200 ml of water, spray the infected flower with this solution and cover with a bag.
    2. Fitoverm - dissolve 2 ml of the drug in 200 ml of water, and spray the plant, covering it with a transparent bag for a day.
    3. Aktelik - dilute 1 ampoule in 1 liter of water, the solution has a very pungent odor, it is better to process it in the fresh air. Spray the plant and cover with a bag.
    4. Agravertine - take 5 ml of the drug for half a liter and dilute it in warm water not lower than +18˚C; at low temperatures it does not saturate plant tissues well. Treat the flower with the prepared solution and again cover it with a bag for a day.
    5. Confidor - the soil of an infected flower is treated with a solution.
    6. Kabofos is a proven remedy for pest control; it is also used on the plant substrate.
    7. Intavir - dilute 1 tablet per 10 liters of water, spray the plant with it, cover with a plastic bag.

    After 24 hours, remove the covering bags from plants treated with one of the listed preparations. Spraying should be done every ten days of the month until the pests are completely destroyed.

    Biological drugs

    The use of biological preparations is not only effective in the fight against thrips, but also safe for humans. The best, according to many gardeners, is Fitoverm, which is diluted with 10 ml per 1 liter of water. It is necessary to spray with Fitoverm every three weeks to destroy the larvae hatching from the eggs. Another excellent universal drug “Aktar”, which is prepared at the rate of 1 sachet per 4 g, diluted in 5 liters of water. Treatment is carried out once a month.

    How to deal with pests at home

    On the forums they talk about how to combat flower pests at home:

    1. Collage advises: spray the plant with condifor, and writes that he is amazed at the result. After treating the flower with the solution, by evening the thrips fell off dead and he never saw them on the plant again. The solution was prepared in the following proportion: 1 gram of the drug per half-liter jar of water.
    2. Kroki: got rid of thrips using the drug phytovert. A one-time treatment was enough, but to calm your conscience, you can do one more. Some time after the destruction of the “conquerors”, the plant should be supported with epin.
    3. Natali advises: if signs of a plant becoming infected with thrips appear, cut off all flower ovaries. They are still deformed; pests will “help” them with this. It's difficult to fight them. The plant must be treated several times, possibly several times when the larvae emerge into the “light.” Therefore, about 5 treatments are carried out to destroy the entire thrips colony. You cannot leave even one pest alive.

    In the greenhouse

    You can fight thrips in greenhouses with the help of biological preparations, for example, Thripol-L. To increase its effectiveness, it will be necessary to increase daylight hours to 14 hours. If this is not possible, then introducing a predatory bug (or other entomophages) into greenhouse structures is more effective only from April to September.

    Using glue or pheromone traps will help reduce the number of adults. It is important to know that the latter option is effective in catching males. Their use must be combined with the simultaneous placement of glue traps.

    How to destroy a pest

    Strategic offensive plan! In the initial stage of flower infection, it is possible to fight the pest by spraying it with infusion of tobacco, hot pepper, and soap solution. But these are weak “medicines” against thrips; they can rather be called preventive than curative.

    This pest is persistent and it is very difficult to get rid of it with weak infusions. Better use insecticides. In the fight against thrips, natural remedies recede; only chemistry can cope.

    At what temperature do thrips die?

    The optimal temperature for the development and life of thrips ranges from +15 to +30˚С. At the egg stage, too high a temperature is not required, since it tends to dry out and then die, +20-25 degrees, the best conditions for eggs.

    Then comes the time of the larvae, at +27˚C it begins to molt. Five days is enough for her to reach the size of an adult; after molting, she turns into a protonymph.

    thrips nymph

    High temperature +27˚С promotes rapid (within 24 hours) transformation into a nymph. After three days she is already an imago, and a day later the mature thrips will make its first flight.

    An individual lives for a month or a month and a half, the lowest temperature of the pest’s existence is +9.5˚C. Below the temperature is not acceptable for this aggressor; at zero or below the thermometer mark, death awaits him. It overwinters in the soil in the adult stage.

    Prevention

    To avoid having to spend money and time fighting very tenacious insects, preventive measures will help. Keep your green garden clean. Water the plants regularly, but do not create a “swamp”. Inspect the soil periodically. Check the trunk, flowers and leaf mass. At the first suspicion of an infestation, try to find out exactly the type of pest and begin fighting them.

    Very often, thrips enters an apartment with presented bouquets. Try to keep them separate from indoor plants. If possible, take it out onto the balcony and carefully examine the bouquet you brought. Even if all preventive measures are carefully observed, there is no complete guarantee that plants will not be attacked by thrips. If this problem occurs, take every precaution to ensure your houseplant remains healthy.

    "Fitoverm"

    The product will need to be diluted in two hundred milliliters of warm water. For one treatment, two milliliters of the drug is enough.

    The liquid should be sprayed onto the affected areas. For better concentration, it is necessary to cover the plant with a transparent polyethylene film. The protection can be removed after 24 hours.

    "Vertimek"

    To make the solution, you need to mix two and a half milliliters of the product in ten liters of water. The drug can be used in all crop zones. To enhance the effect, you need to use a protective cover.

    "Agravertine"

    Less effective drug. Reducing the thermometer mark below + 18 degrees reduces the concentration of the product. For half a liter of water you will need five milliliters of natural insectoacaricide. It is recommended to use a plastic bag during the day.

    "Aktelik"

    It has a strong unpleasant odor. Not recommended for use indoors with insufficient air circulation. For processing, you will need to dissolve the ampoule in one liter of water. Polyethylene facilitates the penetration of the drug into plant tissue.

    Pheromone traps are also used to successfully combat thrips.

    Here's how they work: a capsule containing a synthesized sex pheromone is placed in a trap with a sticky bottom. The attractant attracts male thrips, they fly into the trap and stick. Pheromone traps make it possible to constantly monitor the number of pests and, acting as an indicator, make it possible to predict the damage caused by the pest, which helps to apply insecticides most effectively.

    Using sticky traps against thirps

    One of the simplest, most convenient and at the same time quite objective methods for monitoring phytophages is the use of yellow glue traps. They are used to monitor both thrips and whiteflies, as well as leaf miners and aphids. Traps are placed 30 cm above the crop, the norm is 50 pieces/ha. It is effective to place diagnostic traps in places where pests are likely to be localized: along heating circuits, at the entrance to the greenhouse, near central paths. The most effective means of physically controlling pest populations are roll-on glue traps.

    The main purpose of this type of trap is mass mechanical catching of pests. Due to the large adhesive surface area, this product is effective both with low and high thrips populations.

    What to do with the land?

    To prevent thrips colonies from settling on indoor flowers, the air in the room must contain a certain percentage of humidity. Plants should be watered and the soil in the pots should always be slightly damp.

    If infected after treatment with insecticides, the soil should be changed to a depth of five centimeters; this guarantees that there are no thrips larvae left in the soil. Since it is difficult to fight them, it is better to follow preventive methods.

    Fight against "spies"! For “vagrant” pests, it is worth placing sticky traps in blue, pink, and yellow on flowers. Thrips on indoor flowers are, of course, a big nuisance, but you learned how to deal with them.

    Main types

    Thrips on roses - how to get rid of parasites

    Due to the fact that the size of the insect is very small, it is difficult to immediately determine the type of thrips. Scientists distinguish up to 2000 varieties. 300 of them are found in the Russian Federation and neighboring countries. The list of the most common is as follows:

    • heterogeneous;
    • decorative;
    • dracaena;
    • bulbous
    • tobacco;
    • rose;
    • California thrips.

    By their name you can determine which plants they like to attack. Decorative can live both in the middle zone and in more northern regions. It can harm the Phalaenopsis orchid and other species of this plant, as well as the monstera palm and dieffenbachia. Less than 2 mm in size, brown in color.


    Tobacco thrips

    Not all thrips are equally dangerous to plants, but there are hundreds of them that should be destroyed immediately. The pest consumes the juices of leaves and fruits, and also transmits diseases and leaves toxic secretions on the flora. Thrips lives secretly, hiding in secluded places. Therefore, it is not always possible to detect it in a timely manner at the very beginning.

    Find and destroy

    Potted violet leaves affected by thrips

    When a population is discovered, a problem arises: how to treat the plants in order to not only kill harmful parasites, but also minimally injure your favorite flowers? After all, both adult voracious bugs and larvae pose a danger. A single treatment even with potent drugs such as Karbofos, Vertimek, Karate, Fitoverm and others will not give the desired effect. Periodic spraying and combined methods (watering, wiping) will significantly increase the efficiency of plant treatment. Before using chemical compounds, you can first apply a soap solution to all parts of the plant, leave the plant there for a day, then wash off the solution. Or leave potato tops (600 g) in water for 8 hours and spray the flower with this mixture. Mospilan, Apache or Dantop (neurotoxins) are recommended for chemical treatment of thrips. If several plants are affected, you need to treat all plants in the house with an insecticide.

    The most delicate flower crops should not be sprayed. Noteworthy is the wide-spectrum thrips remedy Gaupsin. It is both a fungicide and a bioinsecticide

    It not only kills fungal formations that parasitize the sticky secretion, but also the thrips themselves. With an almost absolute result (90-94%), the drug is excreted from plants, does not accumulate in the soil, and is not toxic to humans and domestic animals.

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