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Pest x crop · Mealybugs on strawberries

How to get rid of mealybugs on strawberries

Low — occasional

What mealybugs look like on strawberries

White cottony patches on strawberry crowns, leaf petioles, and at the soil line; sticky honeydew on lower leaves.

For the full set of mealybugs damage symptoms across host crops, see our Mealybugs identification page.

Why strawberries attracts mealybugs

Mealybugs are not a primary outdoor strawberry pest, but they are documented on protected strawberry crops, where warm conditions and dense canopy support the lifecycle.

Severity for this combo: Low — occasional. When to act: Polytunnel and protected strawberry production through the season.

Step-by-step control protocol

This is the integrated-pest-management protocol — non-chemical control first, biological and organic options second, conventional sprays only as a labelled last resort. Total cycle: about three weeks for most home cases.

  1. Confirm the pest. Inspect the plant — look for white cottony tufts in leaf axils, leaf undersides, and stem joints. If unsure, photograph the affected area and open Growli for instant species ID.
  2. Isolate where possible. Move container-grown strawberries away from healthy plants. For outdoor beds, mark the affected row so you can monitor it daily.
  3. Apply non-chemical control first. Dab visible adults with a cotton swab dipped in 70 percent isopropyl alcohol
  4. Add biological or organic spray. Insecticidal soap on visible colonies; remove and bin the worst-affected leaves and runners. Quarantine new strawberry plants for 3 weeks.
  5. Repeat on schedule. Most mealybugs protocols need repeating every 5-7 days for three weeks to catch each new hatch. A female lays 300-600 eggs in a cottony ovisac. Crawler-stage nymphs hatch wax-free and mobile — this is the only stage when contact sprays really work. Adults are protected by their wax coat.
  6. Monitor and prevent recurrence. Inspect strawberries weekly for the rest of the season. Quarantine new plant arrivals for 3 weeks before mixing with your collection

Best biological control for mealybugs on strawberries

For greenhouse, polytunnel, conservatory, and indoor production on strawberries, biological control gives long-term suppression without the residue or pollinator harm of synthetic sprays:

Organic spray options

Horticultural oil and insecticidal soap work best during the crawler stage, when nymphs have not yet built their wax shield — apply every 5-7 days to catch successive hatches. Neem oil disrupts moulting. Systemic insecticides are sometimes used in commercial nursery production but are not appropriate for edibles or indoor herbs.

Pesticide safety: Always read the product label and follow manufacturer's PPE, dosage, and re-entry guidance. Pesticide approvals change — confirm via the UK HSE pesticide register or US EPA before use.

Prevention going forward

Common mistakes when treating mealybugs on strawberries

Frequently asked questions

How do I get rid of mealybugs on strawberries?
Insecticidal soap on visible colonies; remove and bin the worst-affected leaves and runners. Quarantine new strawberry plants for 3 weeks. A female lays 300-600 eggs in a cottony ovisac. Crawler-stage nymphs hatch wax-free and mobile — this is the only stage when contact sprays really work. Adults are protected by their wax coat.
What do mealybugs look like on strawberries?
White cottony patches on strawberry crowns, leaf petioles, and at the soil line; sticky honeydew on lower leaves.
When should I treat mealybugs on strawberries?
Polytunnel and protected strawberry production through the season.
Why are mealybugs attracted to strawberries?
Mealybugs are not a primary outdoor strawberry pest, but they are documented on protected strawberry crops, where warm conditions and dense canopy support the lifecycle.
What is the best biological control for mealybugs on strawberries?
Cryptolaemus montrouzieri (mealybug destroyer) — release larvae rather than adults for indoor use; adults disperse. Insecticidal soap on visible colonies; remove and bin the worst-affected leaves and runners. Quarantine new strawberry plants for 3 weeks.
Will mealybugs on strawberries spread to other plants?
Yes. Mealybugs from strawberries typically migrate to nearby susceptible hosts — see the affected-crops list on the main mealybugs page. Quarantine, sticky traps, and weekly inspections of neighbouring plants are essential.
Are pesticides safe to use on strawberries?
Insecticidal soap, horticultural oil, neem oil, and Bti are the safest options for edible and indoor strawberries. Always read the product label and follow manufacturer's PPE, dosage, and re-entry guidance. Pesticide approvals change — confirm via the UK HSE pesticide register or US EPA before use.

Sources

Combo-specific guidance sourced from US Cooperative Extension publications (UC IPM, NC State, UMD, UMN, Penn State, CSU, UF/IFAS EDIS), Clemson HGIC fact sheets, Royal Horticultural Society guidance, and Cornell NYS IPM Biocontrol fact sheets. Reviewed by the Growli editorial team in May 2026.

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Treat mealybugs on strawberries with Growli

Snap a photo and Growli confirms the species, cross-references it against your strawberries, and schedules the 3-week treatment reminder for you.

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