Milkweed plant - aphids
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Milkweed plant - aphids
I have a volunteer milkweed plant that has been growing for a few years. It is by the fence but still not too far from my tomato plants (grown in containers). Caterpillars including tiny hornworms have already been found on my tomato plant leaves with even a couple of green tomatoes with holes.
The underside of the leaves are covered with what I think is aphids. Can someone identify? Should I cut the plant from the base and have a big bag ready or is this somehow good for nature and I should keep it?
Please advise,
Barb
The underside of the leaves are covered with what I think is aphids. Can someone identify? Should I cut the plant from the base and have a big bag ready or is this somehow good for nature and I should keep it?
Please advise,
Barb
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- pondgardener
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
Definitely aphids...I had the exact same thing on some of the butterfly weed in the early part of the summer. Looks like a feast for the ladybug population!
It's not what you gather, but what you scatter, that tells what kind of life you have lived.
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
So should I leave the plant alone or let it go to the chopping block?
- MissS
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
These plants are a magnet for the aphids. I usually just let things be so that I don't harm the monarch caterpillars that are on them too. The lady bugs may or may not move in to take care of them. This type of aphid will stay on your milkweed and should leave your tomatoes alone. My vote is to let them be.
~ Patti ~
AKA ~ Hooper
AKA ~ Hooper
- PlainJane
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
Try washing them off with the hose ... that will knock them back anyway.
“Never try to outstubborn a cat.”
- Robert A. Heinlein
- Robert A. Heinlein
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
Thanks for responding and letting me know that the aphids won't migrate to my tomato plants. The plant stays.
- BLT on Toast
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
Thanks, I have the same thing going on in my garden. In South Florida we are just getting started planting out seedlings for the winter and I also like the butterflies.
- stone
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
Those tropical milkweed have detractors.
On the internet, some people fear that the plant keeps the monarchs in the area past the time for migration.
Can't prove it by me, I get so few....
I did get a few monarch cats this autumn... And they became butterflies.
Suggest branching out.
I grow several matelea, and asclepias tuberosa, and common milkweed, plus others that aren't coming to mind... the aphids don't seem to bother the butterflies.... as to what happens when those aphids mature and develop wings? Can't really say... I try to encourage ladybugs.
On the internet, some people fear that the plant keeps the monarchs in the area past the time for migration.
Can't prove it by me, I get so few....
I did get a few monarch cats this autumn... And they became butterflies.
Suggest branching out.
I grow several matelea, and asclepias tuberosa, and common milkweed, plus others that aren't coming to mind... the aphids don't seem to bother the butterflies.... as to what happens when those aphids mature and develop wings? Can't really say... I try to encourage ladybugs.
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Re: Milkweed plant - aphids
I use Safer Soap on these orange/yellow aphids, it kills them but they come back quickly so you have to keep at it. I've started squishing them with my fingers (every time I walk by, which is often) and that seems to work also. The squished aphids take up space on the stems and the live ones don't seem to repopulate as quickly on those spots.