Weevil on a strawberry. Methods of struggle
Raspberry-strawberry weevil - dangerouspest. It is a small beetle (up to 3 mm) of gray-black color of weevil family. It hibernates under lumps of soil and plant remains. In spring, with warming up to 10 degrees Celsius, the beetles wake up and come to the surface.
Weevil on the strawberry leaves punctures, which are visible only after a close inspection. Crippled specimens droop and wither. As the females bite the pedicels, they fall to the ground.
Larvae appear from eggs (white larvae),which pupate, giving a new generation. Going out, the young weevil on the strawberry eats green berries and the flesh of the leaves, spoiling them, and then moves to raspberry. Winter it goes to the ground.
Gardeners, faced with this pest, are wondering how to fight and how to treat the strawberry from the weevil.
If the weevil on the strawberry multiply,then after harvesting the site is better treated with insecticide solutions (Corsair, Actellyk, Carbofos, Vofatoks, Amush, Gordon, Metafos, etc.). Chemical treatment is desirable to be carried out in the morning to reduce the harm caused to useful ground beetles, destroying pests (1 ground beetle eats 20 weevils per day).
Opponents of the use of chemistry in their gardenyou can recommend another way to solve this problem. The weevil on a strawberry can be destroyed and with the help of a safe natural remedy. For its preparation, a three-liter canister should be filled with onion husk and celandine grass in a ratio of 2: 1, then pour boiling water. After cooling, dissolve the resulting solution and sprinkle. The first time - with the opening of the first flowers, the second - after two weeks. It would be enough. It should be noted that the remedy works practically against all pests, and it does not deter bees, so spraying will not affect spraying. Moreover, it is still the prevention of fungal diseases, in particular, gray rot.
Struggle with a weevil on strawberries may not be carried out, since this pest does not cause severe damage to crops, because something must remain for its offspring.