Ridgerunner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,229
- Reaction score
- 10,064
- Points
- 397
- Location
- Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
I have seen both tomato hornworms and tobacco hornworms with those parasites. Occasionally I've found just the dry husk left after the parasites sucked them dry.
I don't know how much good it does for me to leave the worms with parasites alone. I typically find them in the garden before they do that much damage and long before the parasites kill them. Most of the ones I find don't have the parasites anyway, those parasites are pretty rare.
But those worms will live on certain weeds I don't monitor, weeds just growing wild. And it goes against the grain to kill the worms and not let the parasites complete their life cycle. Maybe they do help some in keeping the overall numbers down so I leave the infested ones alone.
I don't know how much good it does for me to leave the worms with parasites alone. I typically find them in the garden before they do that much damage and long before the parasites kill them. Most of the ones I find don't have the parasites anyway, those parasites are pretty rare.
But those worms will live on certain weeds I don't monitor, weeds just growing wild. And it goes against the grain to kill the worms and not let the parasites complete their life cycle. Maybe they do help some in keeping the overall numbers down so I leave the infested ones alone.