DESCRIPTION
Adults: The small adult green peach aphid is light to dark
green or pink, with red eyes. Three dark lines run down its back. Wings
may or may not be present. The tobacco aphid is similar and can be either red or green.
Eggs: Found only in the northern United States, the egg is black and shiny for the
green peach aphid. The tobacco aphid has not been found to have an egg stage.
Nymphs: The wingless nymph resembles the larger adult.
BIOLOGY
Host Plants: Green peach aphids have been collected from over 100 plants,
including a wide variety of vegetable and ornamental crops. Spinach, potatoes,
and peaches (the host on which eggs are laid) seem to be especially favored
hosts. Tobacco aphids will be pests primarily on tobacco and closely related
plants such as flowering tobacco and Nicotiana. It is probably not a major
pest, but will feed on pepper and eggplant as well as cole crops such as
turnips, kale, and collards.
Damage: Aphids suck plant sap and contaminate the host with honeydew and cast skins.
Some hospitals refuse to allow cut flowers in patients' rooms because of the mess by
aphids. They are also the vectors of a number of plant viruses including tobacco,
tomato, lettuce, dahlia, canna, and bee mosaics as well as tuber spindle, rugose mosaic,
and leaf roll diseases of potato. Life Cycle: In the northern United States, green peach
aphids overwinter as eggs, but in the Southeast, no eggs are laid. Instead, female
aphids give birth to young females during the growing season. The reproductive capacity
of green peach aphids has been described as "fantastic." High reproductive rates- and
resistance to pesticides make the green peach aphid a formidable pest in the greenhouse.
Up to 30 generations per year may take place in this pest's southernmost range.
The
tobacco aphid probably overwinters on weed hosts or on cole crops that remain alive
through the winter. Tobacco aphids are not known to have an egg stage, and they
reproduce by giving birth to live young female aphids without mating. Their young
are able to produce young as well without mating. If the plant becomes too crowded
or if it becomes late in the season and the aphids need to find a winter host, the
aphids give birth to young that will grow up to have wings and can move to other
plants. Differences on reproductive rates exist between the red and green forms
of the tobacco aphids. The red form is able to reproduce much faster during
extremely hot weather than the green form.
On chrysanthemums, green peach aphids feed on all parts of the plant (melon
aphids feed only on the buds and leaves, and chrysanthemum aphids feed only on
the stems and leaves). Green peach aphids will not become established in the
presence of the other two aphids unless pesticides are applied. In that case,
green peach aphids outlive both melon aphids and chrysanthemum aphids.
MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
Because green peach aphids overwinter on weed hosts,
infestations can occur in the greenhouse any time of year. Green peach aphids
readily infest bedding plants and can be introduced into greenhouses whenever
bedding plants are brought in from another grower. Although damage per aphid
is often not serious, these aphids reproduce so rapidly that serious harm can be done in a short time.
Biological Control: Ladybugs, lacewings, syrphid flies, damsel bugs, wasps,
and parasitic fungi tend to regulate green peach aphid populations outdoors.
Pesticides: These aphids' resistance to pesticides calls -for thorough applications
whenever a new infestation is found. Tobaccoaphids can be controlled in the same
manner as green peach aphids.