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By Sharon Omahen


University of Georgia


and Jackie Sosby


Ga. Dept. of Agriculture



As bugs go, pink hibiscus mealybugs are cute. They’re light
pink
and look as if they’ve walked through powdered sugar. But if
you’re a greenhouse grower or homeowner with new hibiscus plants,
they’re not so cute.



Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Tommy Irvin issued an
alert
this week asking University of Georgia Extension Service county
agents to be on the lookout for the exotic pest.



Florida fighting pest for two years



“They came into south Florida about two years ago from the
Caribbean,” Irvin said. “These insects are a problem to stop and
contain because there’s no effective chemical treatment.”



First Foliage Nursery in Homestead, Fla., shipped as many as
44,000 infested hibiscus plants into Georgia from early March to
early June, GDA officials said.



The plants were shipped to Lowe’s and Home Depot stores in
Georgia. All but four of the 41 stores are in metro Atlanta and
north Georgia.



Has potential to hurt ag crops



Cotton and okra are hibiscus family members, too. Peanuts
could also be affected by the insect. But
UGA entomologist Will Hudson says it’s unlikely the tiny intruder
will affect the state’s farm crops.



“Hibiscus doesn’t survive outdoors here, even in the Tifton
area,” he said. “The annual ones die back to the ground in the
winter, and the tropical ones will, too, if you leave them
outdoors. Most of this insect’s host plants aren’t cold-hardy,
because it’s primarily a tropical- and subtropical-area pest. It
remains to be seen if it can thrive in south Georgia.”



Hudson and his UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences colleagues work on ways to control insects on both crops
and ornamental plants.



Outdoor plants should be safe, he said. But indoor plants
aren’t.



“It’s really giving us fits in interior-scapes,” Hudson said.
Interior-scapes include mall and hotel areas decorated with
plants.



If you’re managing an interior-scape, Hudson says, inspect
plants
for mealybugs and pull out as many as necessary to make sure
you’re rid of all infected plants.


Interior-scapes should be inspected



“To fight a bug like this in an interior-scape would be really
expensive and ultimately a losing proposition,” he said.
“These areas are typically close to human traffic and sometimes
to food courts, so spraying pesticides isn’t an option.”



If you buy indoor plants, Hudson says, inspect them,
particularly
hibiscus, for signs of mealybugs.



Adult mealybugs are about 3 millimeters long and pink. Males
are
smaller than females and have one pair of wings and two long,
waxy tails.



“Chances are, you aren’t going to see the adults, because by
the
time you can, the plant will have a lot of distorted growth,” he
said.



“The first signs are waxy, dirty, sooty mold growing on the
leaves and distorted plant growth,” he said. “Also pay attention
to the stems, where early infestations occur, and look for
little, cottony masses the size of a Q-tip. This is an egg mass
that can contain hundreds of eggs.”



If you spot any of that, don’t buy the plant.



With most mealybugs it takes a while for the plant to succumb.
“But this one injects a toxin as it feeds so that you get a lot
of distorted growth and death of the plant pretty quickly,”
Hudson
said.



Trash ’em is the best control method



If you find mealybugs on houseplants, Hudson doesn’t recommend
trying to control it with a pesticide.



“Most of the time it’s going to be cheaper and more effective
to
discard that one plant and buy another,” he said. “But discard it
quickly before they can spread to your other houseplants.”



The GDA recommends double-bagging infested plants in black
plastic, tying the bags securely and leaving them in the hot sun
for at least two weeks. Hudson agrees.



“Our nursery and greenhouse growers may elect to fight it with
pesticides,” Hudson said. “We just want to get rid of them the
quickest way and not let them get established in our state.”