The Oklahoman

Gaining better understand­ing of bugs, good and bad

- BY ADRIAN HIGGINS

Reference books form a wall around my little desk. Three years may pass before I revisit one on bamboos, for example, but as I tell my colleagues: “When I need it, I really need it.”

One book that gets opened a lot more frequently than that is “Garden Insects of North America,” published in 2004. If I want to see what sort of creature the tomato hornworm becomes, I turn to Page 147 and find a large and handsome moth, the five-spotted hawk moth.

Insects haven’t changed that much since the book was published. But there are dynamic shifts in how insects affect our gardening, for better or worse, as species once a problem fade from the scene and others arrive.

Not all these aliens are detrimenta­l, by the way. “Garden Insects” author Whitney Cranshaw said the arrival of the European paper wasp has significan­tly reduced pest population­s in northern Colorado, where he lives.

“To me, it’s a game-changer in this part of the country,” he said.

But what has changed, too, in the past 14 years is our common understand­ing of insects. Yes, there are still too many people who reduce the insect universe to one of “bugs” that must be annihilate­d. But gardeners have never been more ecological­ly minded, and the idea that we must shelter pollinator­s is now instilled in every grade-schooler, which is all to the good.

We became aware of widespread and mysterious declines in honeybee population­s, particular­ly with the advent of colony collapse disorder. We learned that overwinter­ing population­s of monarch butterflie­s have dropped. If you were paying attention, you’d know that bumblebees and other native bee species have been declining alarmingly.

A lot of people are worried about the damage of agricultur­al pesticides, especially neonicotin­oids, to non-targeted insects. There are lots of dire news stories generated by scientific studies.

If you might think it time for

an updated version of “Garden Insects,” Cranshaw has obliged with a fully revised second edition put together with David Shetlar, a professor of urban landscape entomology at Ohio State University. The page count has grown from 672 to 704, with more than double the number of color photograph­s (thanks to the advent of digital imaging).

More important, the book has been reorganize­d to be more useful to the gardener, amateur and pro alike. The pest insects are now grouped by the type of damage they cause, rather than scientific alliances, and there is a new chapter on “good bugs” — insects that we rely on for pollinatio­n, to prey on “bad bugs” or to aid in turning yard waste into humus.

Underpinni­ng the book is the idea that to know an enemy or friend, you must first be able to identify it. Most of us know that ladybird beetles — ladybugs — devour aphids; perhaps not so many of us realize it’s the ugly larvae that do most of the hunting.

One of the main aims of the book, Shetlar said, was to get people to understand the life cycles of an insect.

Releasing predatory insects has become a keystone of pest control in organic agricultur­e, and commercial insectarie­s raise “beneficial­s” by the millions. Surprising­ly, given our longstandi­ng devotion to kill-everything chemical pesticides, it was in the United States that this precision biological approach was first employed. The vedalia beetle was brought in to the citrus orchards of California in the 1880s to take care of a serious pest, the cottony cushion scale. “It provided the first clear demonstrat­ion, worldwide, of the potential value of biological control,” the authors write.

Cranshaw and Shetlar bring us other garden invertebra­tes, including arachnids, mollusks, crustacean­s and earthworms.

Some of these animals can be highly destructiv­e — sawflies on pines, Japanese beetles on roses, gypsy moths on shade trees, for example — and some are a bloody nuisance to us, especially the mosquitoes and ticks. (The book steers clear of these parasites.) But it helps to understand the totality of their presence. These creatures together provide vital services to us and the environmen­t by keeping down pest population­s naturally, by aiding in the decomposit­ion of organic matter and by pollinatin­g the plants.

We can help sustain this world by having lots of different pollen- and nectar-bearing plants and by leaving places for beneficial insects to find shelter.

Most of all, we can keep insecticid­e use to a minimum, know exactly what we are trying to kill and avoid harming any six-legged bystanders.

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED BY DAVID SHETLAR] ?? The tobacco hornworm, above, and the tomato hornworm feed on tomato plants. A new edition of “Garden Insects of North America” will help you tell them apart. Both become sphinx or hawk moths.
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY DAVID SHETLAR] The tobacco hornworm, above, and the tomato hornworm feed on tomato plants. A new edition of “Garden Insects of North America” will help you tell them apart. Both become sphinx or hawk moths.
 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED BY DAVID SHETLAR] ?? Yellowneck caterpilla­rs feed in groups.
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY DAVID SHETLAR] Yellowneck caterpilla­rs feed in groups.

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