DESCRIPTION
Adults: About 1.5 mm long, the adult is a white insect that
resembles a tiny moth.
Eggs: The small oblong eggs, pale green to purple, are deposited on the lower
leaf surface, often in a circle or a crescent.
Nymphs: The first instar nymph is mobile and similar to a scale insect crawler.
Later nymphal stages are yellowish with red eyes, and are immobile. They resemble
soft scale insects, but have an orifice on the back through which honeydew is expelled.
Pupae: The oval pupa is pale green to black when parasitized. The normal color, when
empty, is clear-glassy with a fringe of glassy setae, and with some long glassy setae
on the dorsal surface. The pupal case sits upon a vertical palisade of closely appressed
wax rods (these are readily visible in side view).
BIOLOGY
Distribution: Greenhouse whiteflies are worldwide pests of greenhouse-grown
ornamentals and vegetables. First discovered in England in 1856, they were found in the
northeastern United States in 1870. Tropical Central or South America are suggested
origins of the greenhouse whitefly.
Host Plants: Greenhouse whiteflies infest a wide variety of ornamental and vegetable
crops, and they can survive outdoors during the growing season, particularly in sheltered
locations. Even trees may be infested (redbud, Kentucky coffee berry, and avocado).
Damage: Infested plants become chlorotic and unthrifty. Honeydew and sooty mold further
detract from the appearance of the crop. Unless controlled, greenhouse whiteflies may
completely destroy the commercial value of floricultural crop.
Life Cycle: Greenhouse whiteflies reproduce relatively slowly (one generation every 30 to
45 days), but each may lay up to 400 eggs and live as long as 2 months. Adults are usually
found on the lower surface of new leaves. The new crawlers move about the plant for a day
or two, often from leaf to leaf before inserting their mouthparts to feed. Once this occurs
they probably do not move again until mature. The crawlers molt into nymphs and then
into pupae. Finally, a new generation of whitish yellow adults emerges. They are soon covered
by a white waxy bloom.
CONTROL
Lower greenhouse temperatures used in the culture of some bedding and potted plant
varieties tend to encourage infestations, because naturally occurring parasitic wasps (Encarsia
formosa) are reproductively inhibited at temperatures below 24°C (75°F). The lady beetle Delphastus
pusillus also attacks greenhouse whitefly.
Control of whiteflies is difficult because the eggs and immature forms are resistant to many aerosol
and insecticide sprays. One must make regular applications of pesticides to control emerging adults until
the last of a whole generation of immature whiteflies has emerged. However, some of the synthetic
pyrethroid and synthetic insect growth-regulator pesticides are extremely effective and need
not be applied as often.