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Thrip Adult Killer - Orius laevigatus


Size

What Are Thrips & How Do I Identify Them?

Thrips are the smallest winged insects, and there are about six species of Thrip that cause damage to plants in greenhouses and indoor growing. Thrips have six stages in their life cycle; egg, two larval stages, pre-pupa, pupa and adult. The larvae and the adults feed on plants. The adults are tiny, dark coloured, pencil shaped insects, often found in flowers. The larvae are often found on the leaves. The Thrip pierce plants when feeding, causing plant tissue to die. This will be evidenced by silvery scratches on leaves with tiny black marks on.

What Are Orius Laevigatus Predatory Bugs & How Can They Help?

The Orius predatory bug feeds on adult Thrip and larvae, including the larger larvae. Both the adult and the nymph stage of the Orius life cycle will feed on Thrips. 

The Orius will also feed on flower pollen which allows for their introduction before the Thrip pests are visibly present. With predators on the plant at all times, the Thrips can be killed before they can take hold. Orius can take a few weeks to establish and does need a source of pollen to establish, so is better suited to flowering plants.

We advise the combined application of Orius with the Amblyseius cucumeris predatory mites to tackle larger infestations, and establish total control.

Severe Thrip infestations may require more than one application of predators. Allow 7-10 days and reapply the predators if the Thrips are still visibly present. Once the infestation is controlled switch to our sachets to avoid further outbreaks.


When Should I Use Orius?

We advise using Orius when Thrips are already present on the plant. This immediately releases a large number of active predators to bring infestations under control.

What Conditions Does Orius Require?

Orius are active at temperatures over 20 and most effective when applied from May. 

How Many Orius Predatory Bugs Do I Need?

We recommend the following application rate based on an average plant height of 1m:

- Light infestation: 200 bugs per plant

- Heavy infestation: 500 bugs per plant

Repeat applications may be required against heavy infestations. You should introduce fresh predators every 7-10 days until the infestation is controlled.

How Do I Apply The Orius?

Ensure the Orius are released in identifiable hot spots of Thrip activity. The Orius are supplied in shaker bottles, so you can apply the predators by rotating the bottle and gently shaking the contents directly onto the infested leaves of the plants. 

Orius can also be applied using our Dragonfli Distribution Boxes, which will be more effective for larger plants. Distribute the shaker bottle contents into your boxes and hang them on the stems or leaves of your plants. The boxes act as small breeding sites for the predators and they will then proceed to exit the boxes and move around the plants.

Repeat applications may be required to maintain Orius populations, or if Thrip numbers were high when the predators were first applied.

Full instructions are provided on delivery.

Can I Store The Orius Bugs?

We advise using Orius straight away upon delivery, this ensures best results as the bugs will be fresh.

Chemical Pesticides

Orius is a living creature and can be affected by any chemical pesticides used within the previous few weeks. As a general guide, refrain from using Natural Pyrethrum or SB Plant Invigorator 2 days prior to use. Other chemical insecticides can have long lasting residues that could harm Orius and other predatory bugs for much longer periods. Refrain from using these products or check with Dragonfli for information on the effect of these products on the predatory bugs.

Customer Reviews

Based on 3 reviews Write a review

Customer Reviews

Based on 11 reviews
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L
Laura Horton
Tucked straight in

Out of the bottle and straight in to munching thrips and greenfly. Got the situation more under control. Not quite eradicated as I eventually had to open my window and they chose to leave. I'll get some more and lock them in for another fortnight though. Most effective treatment yet.

N
Nick York
Fantastic little critters

Placed the breeding boxes among the plants, opened the tubes to fill the boxes and an army of little critters immediately emerged from the tube onto my fingers, into the plants where they steamed through the canopy destroying virtually all all stages of the Thrip infestation with incredible efficiency. In less than 24 hrs I found it near impossible to find any trace of Thrip life. For more than 2 yrs I previously tried so many different types of pesticides with little to no effect other than causing chemical burns damage etc. These critters are amazing, but after approximately 4-5 days after introduction I did start to notice 1st stage larvae appearing. I then introduced Swirski cumbalise (check spelling) which with 3-4 days started to emerge from the foil packs once again making their way through the plants destroying any new Thrips and eggs. The health of the plants is now exceptional. I will now periodically introduce both types of predators into the greenhouse purely as an ongoing preventative measure. Just a little tip. Always keep heavy pollinators mixed in with your plants as the predators live and thrive off of pollen helping to prolong their life span and aid on going breeding program.

P
Pothos pal
Love the organic principle

It's hard to tell how effective these guys are but after two rounds of treatment the thrips infestation in my apartment seems to have died down. I'm also using the sticky blue traps and the smaller predators.

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Nick
Thrip adult killer

Worked very well alongside mighty mites to get rid of the thrips

B
Bri
These are the business!

I bought these a few days after buying some of the 'swirskii mites' sachets. I was hoping the mites would storm out and I would be able to see them actively attacking the thrips - this didn't happen, and isn't supposed to happen. That's what 'orius-laevigatus' is for! As soon as I introduced these they quickly and purposefully moved around, searching - hunting. I don't think my infestation was especially large (though there were visible adults and larvae) - but the combination I mention here has left me unable to find a thrips even when I try and search them out, 2 days after applying the 'orius-laevigatus' which was 6 days after applying the 'Amblyseius swirskii'. You can't argue with the science, these bugs eat thrips.