Havent found any webbing or eggs of any sort but while defoliating today i decided to look at some leaves and i spotted a few of these?
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Soap is a decent way to kill most bugs. Non-toxic but if sprayed on buds they will taste like soap when you smoke them. A lot of sprays use canola oil as the main ingredient and the soap acts like a carrier. Bugs can't get immune to it as it kills them by mechanical means, (suffocates them), and not a poison they can become immune too tho that takes many generations and can't happen from a few sprays. The Safers is just the soap with pyrethrums.My plants seem healthy and there are very few of these but i was hoping it wasnt somethi g worse like Broad mites or something.
I already use neem as an amendment in the soil and as a foliar spray along with the rest of the line from mountain organics botanicals.
Will try the insecticidal soap tho!
Looks like a mite eater. good bug.
-Any idea how it might have gotten in my indoor garden? I uave never applied any predator mites nor gad a pest problem.
Whats in the upper right corner of the last pic?
Check these 2 and see which yours are?
Bulb mites....
Mold mites...
Have a look at both of these and look at yours.
Do yours have what appear to be long hairs on their bodies?
Do they have a yellowish appearance with red mouth parts at the front etc?
Try to distinguish which type you have!
One of these are pests the other are attracted to decay and fungus/bacteria.
they look like beneficial mites to me first thought of a swirski mite (Typhlodromips swirskii) because its pictured on a leaf but when you say they tend to be on the ground more then its probably Hypoaspis spp. they become orange later. both are beneficial/ predatoryA few more pictures and also zoomed out so you can see size comparison. I noticed 1 or 2 gnats flying around the tent? Im thinking predatir mites fighting off fungus gnat larvae now?