During
my residence at Fujikawa Kouka-en I was told of a pest mite regularly found on
pine bonsai. With the help of my teacher I got hold of a specimen. Back in
Sydney, armed with a microscope, thick books and the Internet, I managed to
identify it as the Pine Oribatid (Diapterobates
humeralis). It’s an arboreal mite that feeds on decaying plant tissues,
fungi, algae, and lichens in coniferous forests. For what it’s worth it “cleans”
the tree bark off fungi, algae, and lichens. It also feeds on silk filaments enveloping the eggs of woolly conifer aphids (see my blog post about a similar aphid here http://lomov.blogspot.com.au/2013/10/pest-of-month-asian-woolly-hackberry.html).
By doing that it dislodges the eggs and exposes them to the elements and
the natural predators such as ants and spiders. This means that the Pine Oribatid
is not a pest, but one of the good guys!
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