No till IPM and Pest Identification Please

marsuzano99

Well-Known Member
Hello. I posted in the bugs thread, but nobody there is growing organic, and they keep giving me half assed answers telling me I have bugs because I have mulch and cover crop, and haven’t helped identify them at all.
This is my problem I have been having.
This is my third cycle using the same soil. 2nd cycle was great, little to no pests. I introduced some earthworms, and I don’t know if this is where it started from, but around the same time, I started seeing little white specks moving around on the outside of my fabric pots. Aye two weeks later and their population boomed. I don’t know if they are aphids or mites. I can’t see them actively eating my plants, and there isn’t any definitive damage that tells me they are being eaten, but the bugs do crawl on my seedlings. The bugs just crawl on anything and everything, so I think it’s just by chance when they are on my plants, although statistically there is always at least 5 crawling on them at once.
Please help me identify what they are, and what IPM to use if necessary. Thank you.
 

Attachments

  • C76AFDC9-DF00-4381-9577-A7EEB80C3896.jpeg
    C76AFDC9-DF00-4381-9577-A7EEB80C3896.jpeg
    1.7 MB · Views: 30
  • 221C4E63-E2ED-40EF-B015-BAD8C6BC583E.jpeg
    221C4E63-E2ED-40EF-B015-BAD8C6BC583E.jpeg
    1.9 MB · Views: 31
  • BFB648A1-02A8-4435-B1BA-56D493C5F295.jpeg
    BFB648A1-02A8-4435-B1BA-56D493C5F295.jpeg
    917.9 KB · Views: 34
  • 416AFC36-2664-49B0-808D-37902B89C0D7.jpeg
    416AFC36-2664-49B0-808D-37902B89C0D7.jpeg
    467.9 KB · Views: 33
  • C859518D-BC6D-4534-8F69-E9683DF1A156.jpeg
    C859518D-BC6D-4534-8F69-E9683DF1A156.jpeg
    1 MB · Views: 32
  • 9E2BA4AE-7AEC-42CE-AFC2-F99AF23EE0FC.jpeg
    9E2BA4AE-7AEC-42CE-AFC2-F99AF23EE0FC.jpeg
    1 MB · Views: 30
Hello. I posted in the bugs thread, but nobody there is growing organic, and they keep giving me half assed answers telling me I have bugs because I have mulch and cover crop, and haven’t helped identify them at all.
This is my problem I have been having.
This is my third cycle using the same soil. 2nd cycle was great, little to no pests. I introduced some earthworms, and I don’t know if this is where it started from, but around the same time, I started seeing little white specks moving around on the outside of my fabric pots. Aye two weeks later and their population boomed. I don’t know if they are aphids or mites. I can’t see them actively eating my plants, and there isn’t any definitive damage that tells me they are being eaten, but the bugs do crawl on my seedlings. The bugs just crawl on anything and everything, so I think it’s just by chance when they are on my plants, although statistically there is always at least 5 crawling on them at once.
Please help me identify what they are, and what IPM to use if necessary. Thank you.
This is a no till by the way. Not just organic amendments.
 
I take offence at the fact you call my answers half assed They were well over three quarter assed. & heres a full assed answer in my opinion your only organic option, torch it:fire:. Find a new hobby bro
 
I must have missed something. These type of soil critters are usually harmless. If we can get a close up I’m sure there is a exact answer. Hopefully 539A4329-9416-49D3-971F-2E52BFB59340.pngt
 
Hello. I posted in the bugs thread, but nobody there is growing organic, and they keep giving me half assed answers telling me I have bugs because I have mulch and cover crop, and haven’t helped identify them at all.
This is my problem I have been having.
This is my third cycle using the same soil. 2nd cycle was great, little to no pests. I introduced some earthworms, and I don’t know if this is where it started from, but around the same time, I started seeing little white specks moving around on the outside of my fabric pots. Aye two weeks later and their population boomed. I don’t know if they are aphids or mites. I can’t see them actively eating my plants, and there isn’t any definitive damage that tells me they are being eaten, but the bugs do crawl on my seedlings. The bugs just crawl on anything and everything, so I think it’s just by chance when they are on my plants, although statistically there is always at least 5 crawling on them at once.
Please help me identify what they are, and what IPM to use if necessary. Thank you.

From the photos, my best guess is that they're some sort of oribatid (soil) mite. It's okay though because they normally avoid eating living plant tissue. Their favorite food is any type of decaying organic material (same thing that red wiggler worms like). In the forest they play a critical roll in organic material cycling that eventually leads to mineralization that feeds your plants.

It seems you lack predators and those orbatids have a great food supply while living under excellent environmental conditions. That's why you have so many. If you want to get rid of a lot of them, just put a melon rind on the surface, and in a few hours carefully dispose of it and the millions of mites fighting over it.
 
From the photos, my best guess is that they're some sort of oribatid (soil) mite. It's okay though because they normally avoid eating living plant tissue. Their favorite food is any type of decaying organic material (same thing that red wiggler worms like). In the forest they play a critical roll in organic material cycling that eventually leads to mineralization that feeds your plants.

It seems you lack predators and those orbatids have a great food supply while living under excellent environmental conditions. That's why you have so many. If you want to get rid of a lot of them, just put a melon rind on the surface, and in a few hours carefully dispose of it and the millions of mites fighting over it.
From looking at orabatid mites, it looks like it might be a house dust mite. Would that be bad? Or no problem for the plants?
 

Attachments

  • B0FC902F-E96A-4555-8377-50DF0B92E25F.jpeg
    B0FC902F-E96A-4555-8377-50DF0B92E25F.jpeg
    831.1 KB · Views: 7
  • D8E0841B-D039-4324-BB45-8AE812EE5DE2.jpeg
    D8E0841B-D039-4324-BB45-8AE812EE5DE2.jpeg
    882.2 KB · Views: 7
Back
Top