Merit hass the active ingredient Imadacloprid in it. This is a massively used systemic pesticide used in agriculture. Unfortunately it seems to be suspect in bee die offs. But for use in a room once to egt rid of Phylloxera I think that bees will not be affected. It seems to be used on ALOT of edible produce including lettuce and tobacco. It seems to be low in toxicity relative to alot of other pesticides including many commonly used organic pesticides. It is Clorinated Nicotine (like Spinosad) so it is very toxic to insects but not too bad for mammals. I thinkit is ~100 LESS toxic than nicotine pesticide but worse for insects.
This is also Bayer Tree and shrub (1.25%) vs Merit (~40%) Imidacloprid and many many other formulations that all contain Imid. I suggest the Bayer Tree and Shrub from Home Depot or many other nurseries as it is pretty weak. Merit is industrial strength and used for hundreds of acres. That concentration is probably dangerous to bring into your house and use for your little grow. The tree and shrub is already weak and for $20 you need to use about 15 cents worth to get rid of Phylloxera. I think that you would just need the smallest amount in hydroponics but need to give it some time to get absorbed. It takes 1 to 7 days to fully absorb throughout plant.
Bayer Tree and shrub 1 teaspoon /gallon of water in a bucket. Put over medium. The medium is important. Rockwool you can pour over top of cubes and let sit absorbing into roots. If you are in other medias you need to adjust delivery. Remember this stuff is not really a contact killer. It needs to be ABSORBED INTO roots and then it gets into plant and kills over next week or so. So if you just pour it over roots and then rinse it off it might not get absorbed. Whatever your technique and medium you need to think thru the delivery. You might add to resevoir and apply for 3 days then change water.
Normally I do not think using systemic is a good idea with a crop like this but for such a difficult pest as root aphids it might be ok to use it once. EVER. You should hit all plants and even house plants too since adults fly and can infect houseplants which can then re-infect. Pour the rest of the gallon on houseplants to kill all aphids around the house. Once Imid gets into your system plants that should be the end of the problem.
I think that this is a low toxicity pesticide that WILL kill Root Aphids if used correctly. That is better than spraying GALLONS of neem etc pesticides like some of you seem to be doing!
Below is a excerpt showing Imid used for tobacco. I think that is important since they are both smoked so if it is pretty safe for Tobacco then I think it is ok for this. Some of you hate ALL pesticides so good luck to you. I am trying to find a least toxic yet still highly effective pesticide.
This works for other sucking insects also but I do not think it should be used for other things as there are other treatments like Spinosad and Floramite.
I might suggest this if you get new clones from someone that might have pests. Add a couple drops of 1tsp/gal to babies and quarantine a few weeks.
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Imidacloprid was registered for use on tobacco as a greenhouse tray drench in 1996 and as a transplant water treatment in 1997. When applied in either method, it provides extended control of aphids, flea beetles and wireworms on field tobacco. Imidacloprid is not registered to control insect pests in greenhouses or plant beds, but when it is applied as a tray drench to greenhouse plants just before transplanting it controls aphids, flea beetles and wireworms on the crop in the field. A single application of imidacloprid was used on an estimated 70 percent of greenhouse transplants at 1.0 to 1.4 fluid ounces per 1000 plants. About 75 percent of the imidacloprid used on tobacco is applied to greenhouse transplants as a tray drench treatment and the remaining 25 percent is applied in the transplant water (14,16).
Imidacloprid was introduced for use in 1996, but little was used during that first year. In 1999 and 2000, imidacloprid was used on an estimated 60 to 70 percent of the tobacco acreage, at a rate of 0.12 pounds active ingredient per acre.
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Root aphids are NOT regular aphids. They share the common name but are very different.
Please if anybody can tell me anything quantifiably bad about Imidacloprid. From my research we all eat lots of this stuff everyday in agriculture. I believe it might be in the top 3 pesticides used worldwide for agriculture.
This is also Bayer Tree and shrub (1.25%) vs Merit (~40%) Imidacloprid and many many other formulations that all contain Imid. I suggest the Bayer Tree and Shrub from Home Depot or many other nurseries as it is pretty weak. Merit is industrial strength and used for hundreds of acres. That concentration is probably dangerous to bring into your house and use for your little grow. The tree and shrub is already weak and for $20 you need to use about 15 cents worth to get rid of Phylloxera. I think that you would just need the smallest amount in hydroponics but need to give it some time to get absorbed. It takes 1 to 7 days to fully absorb throughout plant.
Bayer Tree and shrub 1 teaspoon /gallon of water in a bucket. Put over medium. The medium is important. Rockwool you can pour over top of cubes and let sit absorbing into roots. If you are in other medias you need to adjust delivery. Remember this stuff is not really a contact killer. It needs to be ABSORBED INTO roots and then it gets into plant and kills over next week or so. So if you just pour it over roots and then rinse it off it might not get absorbed. Whatever your technique and medium you need to think thru the delivery. You might add to resevoir and apply for 3 days then change water.
Normally I do not think using systemic is a good idea with a crop like this but for such a difficult pest as root aphids it might be ok to use it once. EVER. You should hit all plants and even house plants too since adults fly and can infect houseplants which can then re-infect. Pour the rest of the gallon on houseplants to kill all aphids around the house. Once Imid gets into your system plants that should be the end of the problem.
I think that this is a low toxicity pesticide that WILL kill Root Aphids if used correctly. That is better than spraying GALLONS of neem etc pesticides like some of you seem to be doing!
Below is a excerpt showing Imid used for tobacco. I think that is important since they are both smoked so if it is pretty safe for Tobacco then I think it is ok for this. Some of you hate ALL pesticides so good luck to you. I am trying to find a least toxic yet still highly effective pesticide.
This works for other sucking insects also but I do not think it should be used for other things as there are other treatments like Spinosad and Floramite.
I might suggest this if you get new clones from someone that might have pests. Add a couple drops of 1tsp/gal to babies and quarantine a few weeks.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Imidacloprid was registered for use on tobacco as a greenhouse tray drench in 1996 and as a transplant water treatment in 1997. When applied in either method, it provides extended control of aphids, flea beetles and wireworms on field tobacco. Imidacloprid is not registered to control insect pests in greenhouses or plant beds, but when it is applied as a tray drench to greenhouse plants just before transplanting it controls aphids, flea beetles and wireworms on the crop in the field. A single application of imidacloprid was used on an estimated 70 percent of greenhouse transplants at 1.0 to 1.4 fluid ounces per 1000 plants. About 75 percent of the imidacloprid used on tobacco is applied to greenhouse transplants as a tray drench treatment and the remaining 25 percent is applied in the transplant water (14,16).
Imidacloprid was introduced for use in 1996, but little was used during that first year. In 1999 and 2000, imidacloprid was used on an estimated 60 to 70 percent of the tobacco acreage, at a rate of 0.12 pounds active ingredient per acre.
++++++++++++++
Root aphids are NOT regular aphids. They share the common name but are very different.
Please if anybody can tell me anything quantifiably bad about Imidacloprid. From my research we all eat lots of this stuff everyday in agriculture. I believe it might be in the top 3 pesticides used worldwide for agriculture.
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