Amblyseius swirskii
(controls Russet Mites, Broad Mites,
Thrips, and Whitefly)
To purchase 200 or more please pre-order before Thursday for shipment by the following Tuesday.
Amblyseius swirskii is a beneficial predator mite that controls Russet Mites, Broad Mites, Thrips, and Whiteflies.
Typhlodromips swirskii, the Swirski mite (synonymy: Amblyseius swirskii, Amblyseius rykei, Neoseiulus swirskii), is a species of predatory mite in the family Phytoseiidae. It is used in biological pest control of western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis)in greenhouse or indoor grown crops.[1]
The adult T. swirskii has a pear-shaped body and is about 0.5 mm
(0.02 in) in length. It has four pairs of legs, the front pair of which
points forward, and a small number of paired bristles on the unsegmented
body. The colour varies with the diet, being pale yellow or tan when thrips and whitefly
are eaten, and reddish on some other diets. It is difficult to
distinguish one species of predatory mite from another in the field.[2]
The life cycle consists of the egg stage, one larval stage, two nymphal stages and an adult stage. The eggs are laid on the undersides of leaves, usually on hairs near the junction of veins. They are oval, whitish and about 0.15 mm (0.006 in) long. They hatch into whitish, non-feeding, semi-transparent larvae with three pairs of legs. These soon develop into the four-legged nymphal stages, and then become adults, both nymphs and adults being predatory. The life cycle takes about five days at 25 °C (77 °F), and the mites can tolerate temperatures between 18 and 36 °C (64 and 97 °F), with 60 percent humidity.[2]
The host range includes the immature stages of western flower thrips, common blossom thrips, onion thrips, melon thrips and chilli thrips, as well as those of silverleaf whitefly and greenhouse whitefly. It can also consume Asian citrus psyllid, broad mites,[3] and other herbivorous mites. When these prey species are not available, it is able to survive and reproduce on a diet of pollen and plant exudates, although its fecundity and growth rates are reduced under these circumstances.[2]
Where two prey species are available, it will prey on the most
available one. For example, in a 2016 research project on field grown
cucumber plants, it was successful in controlling melon thrips on the
leaves, but not common blossom thrips on the flowers of the same plants.[4]
This content is a Remix of content originally published at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhlodromips_swirskii. It is used in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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Amblyseius swirskii
- Brand: Nature's Control
- Product Code: Amblyseius swirskii
- Availability: In Stock
-
- 1 or more $1.50
- 50 or more $1.25
- 100 or more $1.00
- 1000 or more $0.95
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Tags: Amblyseius swirskii, predatory mites, Russet Mites, Broad Mites, Thrips, Whiteflies, whitefly, whiteflys, beneficial insects, predator mites, Typhlodromips swirskii, Amblyseius rykei, Neoseiulus swirskii, Phytoseiidae, Anystis baccarum, anystis, crazee, spider mite predators, thrip control