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Dealing with the mites that target tomatoes
Farmer's Weekly
|Farmer's Weekly 19 August 2022
Minute arachnids or mites start off in patches on a tomato crop and spread rapidly. Generally found on the undersides of leaves, they cause damage by puncturing the plant cells to feed. Bill Kerr looks at three mite species.
Mite species likely to invade your tomato lands are more prevalent in hot, dry conditions. Two common spider mites are the tomato red mite (Tetranychus evansi) and two-spotted mite (T. urticae). The former appears in various shades of red, while the latter has a large spot on each side of the abdomen when seen from above.
Spider mites generally start off in a few patches on the land and then spread rapidly. They are carried on the wind in the same way that newly hatched spiders are: with the help of a silk thread.
They are also easily spread by workers brushing against infected plants; the mites ‘catch a ride’ on clothing.
LIFE CYCLE
The life cycle is rapid: at 25°C, it is completed in just two weeks. The female lays between 50 and 250 eggs during her lifespan; the hotter the conditions, the higher the number of eggs laid.
This story is from the Farmer's Weekly 19 August 2022 edition of Farmer's Weekly.
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