Can anyone give me a quick ID on this bug eating my leaf? Thanks!
Kinda hard to tell, but it looks like an aphid to me.
Almost looks like a baby tick of some sorts with that flatter back side
The damage looks like thrips, but the bug is not long like a thrip. I thought aphid as well.
All that said, the ādamage trailā is kinda leaf-miner-y too.
I agree with the others. looks like an aphid.
I would agree. Looks like Leafminers and an aphid. Spinosad should work on both.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Bonide-32-oz-Captain-Jack-s-Deadbug-Brew-Ready-To-Use-2506/203564356
If itās aphids then thatās an indicator of too much nitrogen, they help your plant slow down so it doesnāt stretch and grow too fast. If youāre using nutrients back off on the N. If youāre not using nutrients then just leave it alone. Plants growing too fast become weak and shitty. Some minor damage wonāt affect potency, itās actually beneficial.
Thanks, all, for the advice. As you can see itās really pretty big. At first I thought mite, but that would be some kind of super-mite. I took the pic with my cell phone at a good distance away. It was the only one I saw in my quarantine tent. If I find another Iāll get the scope on it so we can see the ugly details.
Iāve been using IPM weekly. I think this bug was actually dead when I snapped the pic. Like it ate the leaf and died on its way.
I grow in reused water only soil, so Iām well acquainted with different kinds of bugs, good and bad. This was a new one to me though. Now Iām kind of hoping to see another, and if so, Iāll hold back my urge to instantly destroy it.
To me, it seem shaped like a mite but it is hard to tell in that photo. If itās as large as you say, Iām opting to say female ātickā of some sort. What itās doing on/to your plant, have no idea ā¦ Microscope photo would be helpful if you see another.
I had a similar one, if it had a big head aswell could be a springtail ā¦
Hereās my crazy speculation. I know I have low leveI thrips in this quarantine tent. After IPM the larvae die and are left on the leaf like little brown shriveled hot dogs. I think the leaf damage was caused by a thrip, and then this bug came along and is eating the dead thrip hotdog. You can almost see it in its mouth. I just need a better pic. Either way, no new sightings today.
What is IPM?
Integrated Pest Management. I have been using @nube recipe since this post with great success.
I also use Mammoth CannControl once a month to mix it up a bit.
When I transplant I also use some gnatrol to water them in. Reused soil gets lots of bugs.
Ah, I just let the bugs do what they do. Only slugs I pick out when I see them and throw them on my flat roof for birds to pick up or dry out and die.
Iāve never had any plants ruined by bugs except fungus gnat larves. But thatās only the seedlings, once they establish deeper roots the larves donāt bother my plants. I keep adding chopped up banana peels on top so they leave the roots alone.
I have lots of fungus gnats because I did an experiment where I put my pots and bags in about an inch of water for a few months to see and learn what actually happens.
I lost 3 or 4 seedlings but apart from that my plants grew just fine.
Now gonna dry everything out completely and then water again from the bottom but only a few liters at a time while keeping the topsoil dry. Perhaps that would be ideal. Gonna find out.
Without a better picture, Iām going with stink bug. If it is in fact a stink bug, I wouldnāt really worry about it.
stink_bugs.pdf (2.2 MB)
Stink bug for $500, Bob. Now thatās interesting. We have stink bugs EVERYWHERE around here. Theyāre constantly in our house. But Iāve never seen a small one like that, maybe a kiddo? And Iāve never seen one interested in my plants. But itās an obvious answer that Iāve completely overlooked.
Ya, kinda hard to tell without a better picture, but thatās what first came to my mind when I saw it. Doesnāt look like an aphid to me. Kadie Britt from Virginia Tech has been doing a lot of research on pests of cannabis/hemp.
Britt et al. 2019 First report of bmsb associated with cannabis sativa in the us copy.pdf (586.2 KB)
Well if you can see it more clearly, first thing would be to count the legs. Six legs, itās an insect. Eight legs would be a mite. Next look at the abdomen, an aphid will have two small ātailpipesā in the back.
Iāve had them in my compost, must have been eggs or something like that, because I had a bunch (20 or 30) of little black and yellow or orange stink bugs crawling up my bamboo poles back in the winter sometime. I thought I had some pictures somewhere, Iāll try to find them. they went straight up the bamboo to the medicine bottle I have on top that I tie my limb supports upon, strange sight.
regards,