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Pest x crop · Spider mites on strawberries

How to get rid of spider mites on strawberries

High — act quickly

What spider mites look like on strawberries

Two-spotted spider mite on the underside of strawberry leaves — silvery bronzing, reduced fruit set, leaf cupping. Heavy infestations stunt plants and shorten the season.

For the full set of spider mites damage symptoms across host crops, see our Spider mites identification page.

Why strawberries attracts spider mites

Strawberry foliage is soft and dense, and the matted canopy traps heat and creates dry pockets where mite generations turn over in under a week.

Severity for this combo: High — act quickly. When to act: From flowering onwards, especially in warm dry summers. Use a hand lens on the underside of mid-canopy leaves.

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 fine yellow or bronze stippling on upper leaf surfaces. 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. Raise humidity (mist foliage, group plants, run a humidifier indoors)
  4. Add biological or organic spray. Phytoseiulus persimilis or Neoseiulus californicus predatory mite releases (the standard commercial strawberry control). Maintain even irrigation; avoid broad-spectrum pyrethroids during the season.
  5. Repeat on schedule. Most spider mites protocols need repeating every 5-7 days for three weeks to catch each new hatch. A spider mite egg-to-adult cycle can run as short as 7 days at 27 degC. Populations double every 2-3 days in hot, dry weather, which is why outbreaks seem to appear overnight.
  6. Monitor and prevent recurrence. Inspect strawberries weekly for the rest of the season. Strong water spray underneath every leaf — repeat every 3-4 days

Best biological control for spider mites 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 target mite eggs and adults — apply in cool morning hours, never above 30 degC or on drought-stressed plants. Avoid broad-spectrum pyrethroids, which wipe out the predators that would otherwise crash the population. Sulfur dust is approved on some crops but phytotoxic to cucurbits.

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 spider mites on strawberries

Frequently asked questions

How do I get rid of spider mites on strawberries?
Phytoseiulus persimilis or Neoseiulus californicus predatory mite releases (the standard commercial strawberry control). Maintain even irrigation; avoid broad-spectrum pyrethroids during the season. A spider mite egg-to-adult cycle can run as short as 7 days at 27 degC. Populations double every 2-3 days in hot, dry weather, which is why outbreaks seem to appear overnight.
What do spider mites look like on strawberries?
Two-spotted spider mite on the underside of strawberry leaves — silvery bronzing, reduced fruit set, leaf cupping. Heavy infestations stunt plants and shorten the season.
When should I treat spider mites on strawberries?
From flowering onwards, especially in warm dry summers. Use a hand lens on the underside of mid-canopy leaves.
Why are spider mites attracted to strawberries?
Strawberry foliage is soft and dense, and the matted canopy traps heat and creates dry pockets where mite generations turn over in under a week.
What is the best biological control for spider mites on strawberries?
Phytoseiulus persimilis — specialist predatory mite, gold standard for two-spotted spider mite (62-80 degF, 50-70 percent RH). Phytoseiulus persimilis or Neoseiulus californicus predatory mite releases (the standard commercial strawberry control). Maintain even irrigation; avoid broad-spectrum pyrethroids during the season.
Will spider mites on strawberries spread to other plants?
Yes. Spider mites from strawberries typically migrate to nearby susceptible hosts — see the affected-crops list on the main spider mites 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 spider mites 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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