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| Biology: Orius | |||||||||||||
| For biological thrips control several Orius species are available, such as Orius laevigatus, Orius insidiosus and Orius majusculus. Orius, also called the flower bug, is a small bug with a long mobile rostrum (feeding tube) that it can fold under its body. The red eyes are typical. The most commonly used species are brown to black with white patches on the wing cases. Females are about 3 mm, while males are slightly smaller. A female Orius lays 1 to 3 colourless to white eggs per day embedded in the plant tissue of petioles, stalk parts or veins on the lower side of the leaf. Out of these eggs, an Orius nymph is born after about 5 days. The colour of the nymph depends on the species, but the red eyes are always conspicuous. A newly born Orius laevigatus is first colourless, but turns yellow after a few hours. In the later stages the nymph gradually gets the darker colour of the adult bug. In Orius laevigatus and Orius insidiosus the first four nymphal stages take each about 2-3 days at 25°C (77°F), while the fifth stage lasts for 4-5 days. The total development time is about 3 weeks, but this can be much longer at lower temperatures. An adult pirate bug lives for 3-4 weeks. Adult Orius eat all thrips stages, while younger Orius nymphs only eat thrips larvae. Moreover, Orius also devours other preys such as aphids, spider mites or moth eggs. They always find their prey by touch, grab it with their front legs, insert their rostrum and drain the prey of its body fluids. They sometimes kill more insects than strictly necessary for their own feeding. Moreover, Orius bugs also eat pollen, which enables them to build up a population in pollen bearing crops without the presence of thrips. Some Orius species enter diapause at shorter day lengths, while this does not seem to affect other species or strains.
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| Applications | |||||||||||||
| Orius is used in a wide range of crops to control thrips. In pollen bearing crops (sweet pepper, gerbera, strawberry, egg plant, ...) Orius can be introduced preventatively as 1-2 pieces/m² as soon as there is enough flowering. In combination with other thrips beneficials (Amblyseius cucumeris and/or Amblyseius degenerans) the growing population will protect the crop during the whole cropping season. In several greenhouse vegetable and ornamental crops, Orius can be introduced curatively in and around the hot spots at a rate of 5-10 bugs per m². In cucumber, a crop that does not produce pollen, Orius majusculus can be introduced preventatively. This bug also eats other prey and can feed on plant saps. However, because of the diapause susceptibility, this species can only be used in summer time. When using Orius, it should be kept in mind that Orius is sensitive to several pesticides. For instance, the application of teflubenzuron (Nomolt, Dart) can dramatically affect an Orius population.
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| Orius-System | |||||||||||||
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| User's instructions | |||||||||||||
Note: Several pesticides have a negative effect on Orius spp. Please be careful when controlling diseases and other pests. Constult the Biobest list of side-effects of pesticides on beneficial organisms.
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| Benefits | |||||||||||||
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