New Recipe for Greenhouse Success: Less Insecticide, More Helpful Bugs

New Recipe for Greenhouse Success: Less Insecticide, More Helpful Bugs
February 26, 2026
Author
Adam Drapcho
Photographer
Adam Drapcho

When Chris Schlegel started working at DS Cole, one of the largest commercial greenhouses in New Hampshire, the pest control strategy was simple: Once the first sign of insect damage was spotted, spray everything with insecticide, and repeat every week.

A woman reaches across a tray of seedlings in a greenhouse

Chris Schlegel, head grower at DS Cole in Loudon, says that biocontrols have since displaced chemical insecticides as their first line of defense against pests.

That strategy has since been shelved in favor of another approach, which has Schlegel and her co-workers reaching for chemical controls less often and using less of them when they do. Instead of insecticides, they primarily use what are known as 鈥渂iocontrols,鈥 tools which leverage nature鈥檚 processes to keep insect damage at bay.

In the greenhouse industry, biocontrols largely take the form of predatory insects which are harmless except for their prey. Many growers, such as DS Cole, have adopted biocontrols as a way to greatly reduce their use of insecticides.

Like any new technology, there have been early adopters, but there鈥檚 still a lot of growers in New Hampshire who rely on pesticides as their sole means of pest control. Jonathan Ebba, a field specialist with 91制片厂 Extension, and his colleagues 鈥 including Amber Vinchesi-Vahl and Amy Papineau 鈥 are working to make the transition to biocontrols easier and more successful. 

鈥淎s I鈥檓 doing direct technical assistance with greenhouse growers in the state, I鈥檝e begun to see that they needed clear, step-by-step directions,鈥 says Ebba, who is part of the team that helps growers such as DS Cole. 鈥淪o I put together a biocontrol starter pack. This is a recipe that folks can use to get started, and in subsequent years can adapt it to suit their specific needs.鈥

The biocontrol starter pack includes information about the specific organisms available to growers, as well as a proscribed strategy for how to deploy them in response to the appearance of pests. Ebba鈥檚 plan calls for growers to regularly monitor the activity of insects in their greenhouse 鈥 such as through the use of sticky yellow cards that catch flies as they move between plants 鈥 and when they should respond by releasing predatory insects.

Chemical pesticides will likely still be necessary, though their use will be diminished, both in frequency and in volume.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know anyone who鈥檚 growing ornamentals without pesticides,鈥 Ebba says, 鈥渂ut the biocontrols greatly reduce the amount that they have to use.鈥

At DS Cole, Schlegel began experimenting with biocontrols in 2008, by releasing mites that prey on the thrips that were damaging their gerbera plants. Those thrips had developed resistance to chemical pesticides and multiple sprayings per week couldn鈥檛 control them. Soon the experiment expanded to include controls for the white flies that were damaging their poinsettia crop. In subsequent years, DS Cole started growing potted herbs, and the presence of edible plants made the reduction in pesticide use even more important.

Now, Schlegel says, biocontrols are the operation鈥檚 first line of defense against pests, with chemical controls used only in cases of pest outbreaks that don鈥檛 yet have a commercially available predator.

Benefits of biocontrols are broad, Schlegel says. First and most importantly, it鈥檚 safer for the greenhouse鈥檚 80 employees and their surrounding environment. There are other benefits, too, as many of the plants that DS Cole grows are bought by other growers who don鈥檛 want plants treated with pesticides to disrupt their own biocontrol strategy. Lastly, since they鈥檝e reduced their use of insecticides, they鈥檝e started to notice on their yellow sticky cards native insects, volunteer biocontrol agents that flew in through open windows but wouldn鈥檛 have survived in the days of widespread chemical use.  

How about cost 鈥 is DS Cole spending more on biocontrols than they would if they had stuck to conventional sprays? Schlegel doesn鈥檛 see the point in crunching the numbers.

Several flies are stuck to a yellow card

Chris Schlegel, head grower at DS Cole in Loudon, says that these sticky, yellow cards are placed throughout the greenhouse and are used to monitor for the presence of unwanted insects.

鈥淚 think the bottom line for us and a lot of other growers now is the consideration of the environment and the safety of employees, the consideration of the honeybees and all that, makes it worth it,鈥 Schlegel says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been really successful. We do still get insect pests, but we can target and control. It鈥檚 so much easier to control with chemicals if you haven鈥檛 been using a lot because there isn鈥檛 that resistance.鈥

Extension has been a steadfast partner as DS Cole expanded its use of biocontrols, Schlegel says. Integrated pest management specialists have been available to help with pest identification and control strategies, and have organized monthly IPM webinars or in-person workshops. DS Cole agreed to host one such workshop in October 2025.

鈥淲e get a lot of help from 91制片厂, and they partner with many people who are really knowledgeable too,鈥 Schlegel says.

鈥淥ne of my goals is to be able to report a reduced volume of pesticides that are being utilized for New Hampshire鈥檚 ornamental crop as a result of biocontrols,鈥 Ebba says.

A future where New Hampshire greenhouses routinely look to biocontrols before pesticides is one in which the businesses produce healthier products and have safer employees 鈥 and one in which the surrounding environments are likely to benefit, too.

Published
February 26, 2026
Author
Adam Drapcho
Photographer
Adam Drapcho