Beneficial Insects
37 products
Showing 25 - 37 of 37 products
What's eating your plants?
Tell us what you've got. We'll tell you what to use.
Four parasitoid wasp species in one release, covering nearly every aphid species you're likely to find. You don't need to identify what you have. Release weekly until the aphids are gone, then taper off.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 8 aphid products
Hang the sachets on the plants and they release predator mites continuously for 4 to 6 weeks. The mites attack thrips on the leaves before they reach the soil. Easiest deployment for almost every thrips situation.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 4 thrips products
Handles spider mites, broad mites, and russet mites with one product. Survives between meals so it works for prevention as well as active outbreaks. The right starting point unless you've confirmed a heavy two-spotted spider mite outbreak.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 5 mite products
Hang cards on the plants. Both parasitoid wasp species emerge from the cards over several days, covering both greenhouse whitefly and silverleaf whitefly. You don't need to identify which species you have.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 7 whitefly products
Sprinkle on the top half-inch of growing media and the predatory mites establish a permanent population in the soil. One application lasts for the life of the medium. Eats fungus gnat larvae and thrips pupae.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 4 fungus gnat products
Tiny parasitoid wasps that destroy caterpillar and borer eggs before they hatch. Release weekly for ongoing prevention. The right strain for eastern and central US growers. Western US growers should call us about T. platneri instead.
View productHave a specific situation? See all 5 caterpillar & grub products
The Mealybug Destroyer beetle. Both adults and larvae feed on mealybugs. Release once you can see clusters in leaf joints. Works best in enclosed spaces like grow tents and greenhouses.
View product
Tiny parasitic wasps that lay eggs in fly pupae before adult flies can emerge. Apply to manure piles and bedding. Weekly releases through fly season prevent the next generation from hatching.
View productIf you're not sure what's eating your plants, or which release size fits your space, talk to a real grower before you order. We've been doing this since 2006.
716-217-0353