I went to a presentation last night about problem insect control. There were some really good tidbits. And there was a lot that I thought was crap. And, as always, I have questions.
So I presented a dilemma. In two different gardens I have had in the past, I had an awesome earthworm population which suddenly dropped and i would find earthworm carcasses that looked like they earthworm had wronged his woman and she cut him up with a razor. And she kept cutting on him even after he was dead.
On several occassions I found the culprit: a rove beetle. I should have taken pictures. The problem always seems to pop up right when I am trying to get a lot stuff done, so I end up not doing anything about it.
I asked the presenter how I might be able to intervene and stand up for my buddy the earthworm. Her response was unsettling: ah yes, rove beetles are excellent general predators and earthworms are their favorite. She has seen instances of a mounds of writhing roves beetles where the center of the mound was an earthworm. She felt that the rove beetle should be supported and we probably have too many earthworms anyway.
So my first thought is to introduce diatomaceous earth and set the balance to favoring the earthworms more. Or at least make a safe zone for earthworms. But I've always been concerned about the idea of DE harming earthworms.
So, my dilemma is worse. I'm hoping that others have similar experiences and maybe more observations in this space.
So I presented a dilemma. In two different gardens I have had in the past, I had an awesome earthworm population which suddenly dropped and i would find earthworm carcasses that looked like they earthworm had wronged his woman and she cut him up with a razor. And she kept cutting on him even after he was dead.
On several occassions I found the culprit: a rove beetle. I should have taken pictures. The problem always seems to pop up right when I am trying to get a lot stuff done, so I end up not doing anything about it.
I asked the presenter how I might be able to intervene and stand up for my buddy the earthworm. Her response was unsettling: ah yes, rove beetles are excellent general predators and earthworms are their favorite. She has seen instances of a mounds of writhing roves beetles where the center of the mound was an earthworm. She felt that the rove beetle should be supported and we probably have too many earthworms anyway.
So my first thought is to introduce diatomaceous earth and set the balance to favoring the earthworms more. Or at least make a safe zone for earthworms. But I've always been concerned about the idea of DE harming earthworms.
So, my dilemma is worse. I'm hoping that others have similar experiences and maybe more observations in this space.
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