How to Use Neem Oil As an Organic Insecticide 1

Neem oil insecticide is often a great solution if you are having problems with insects, mites, or fungi bothering your plants. What organic gardeners love about it is that it is safe to use: it will not harm you, your kids, your pets, or your livestock. It is safe even for most wildlife since its insecticidal properties are targeted to specific pests that damage garden plants.1 Learn examples of pests against which neem is effective.

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What is Neem Oil?

Neem oil is the oil that is pressed out of the seeds obtained from neem trees. In addition to its use as an organic insecticide spray, it has been used medicinally and in the cosmetics industry.

Origin and History

Neem oil is pressed out of the seeds obtained from neem trees. The botanical name for this tree is Azadirachta indica. The tree is a broadleaf evergreen that is indigenous to India and the South Asian subcontinent. The tree belongs to the mahogany family and can grow to a height of almost 100 feet. Neem oil and the tree from which it is derived are so called from the Sanskrit, nimba.

How It Works and When to Apply It

The National Pesticide Information Center states, “Neem oil is made of many components. Azadirachtin is the most active. It reduces insect feeding and acts as a repellent. It also interferes with insect hormone systems, making it harder for insects to grow and lay eggs.”

According to the EPA, “Azadirachtin acts in the following ways: it deters certain insects, such as locusts, from feeding and it interferes with the normal life cycle of insects, including feeding, molting, mating, and egg-laying.”2 Just how much Azadirachtin a product you buy off the shelf contains is not, however, always readily apparent; the label may refer to “other ingredients,” then fail to specify.

The Monterey Lawn & Garden Company sells a “70% Neem Oil” product. The OMRI on the container stands for “Organic Materials Review Institute.” In the organic gardening community, an OMRI listing lends a product credibility. Monterey L&G supplies the following instructions for application.

What You’ll Need

Equipment / Tools

  • Garden sprayer

Materials

  • Neem oil
  • Water
Instructions
  1. Mix the neem oil with water

    In a garden sprayer, mix the neem oil at the rate of 2 tablespoons (1 ounce) per gallon of water. Mix the solution thoroughly.

    mixing a neem oil solution
  2. Spray the solution

    Spray all plant surfaces (including undersides of leaves) until completely wet.

    spraying plants with the neem oil solution

    A great sprayer to use to apply neem oil on plants is Garden Gorilla. This company puts out one of the easiest garden sprayers to use.

  3. Reapply regularly

    When applied as a preventative, neem oil should be applied on a 7- to 14-day schedule according to the manufacturers of 70% neem oil. To control a pest or disease already present, they recommend an application on a 7-day schedule.

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    garden sprayer

 

Neem Oil for Pests

Neem oil insecticide kills some pests after they have eaten leaves sprayed with it, while it repels others with its strong smell. Neem oil is used to control many pests, including whitefly, aphids, Japanese beetles, moth larvae, scale, and spider mites. As it kills mites, which are not insects but are related to spiders and ticks, it is listed as a “miticide.” Sprays containing clarified hydrophobic extract of neem oil are also used as fungicides against rust, black spot, mildew, leaf spot, scab, anthracnose, blight, and botrytis.

Beneficial Insects Are Unaffected

Besides being an organic insecticide, using this product allows you to target pests specifically as opposed to beneficial insects such as bees and lady beetles. By definition, “pests” are the insects eating your plants, and neem oil, when properly applied, kills an insect only if it ingests the sprayed foliage (bees and lady beetles do not eat plant leaves).

aphids
 The Spruce / Candace Madonna

 

Using Neem Oil on Trees

  • Flowering dogwood trees (Cornus florida) are highly susceptible to powdery mildew.3 Because powdery mildew is a fungus, the fungicidal properties of neem oil make the product effective for fighting this problem.
  • Blue Star juniper (Juniperus squamata Blue Star) can succumb to infestations of spider mites.4 Take advantage of neem oil’s miticidal properties to kill spider mites on the plant.
  • Spraying Colorado blue spruce trees (Picea pungens) with neem oil can work as an insecticide against Cooley spruce gall adelgid and aphids.
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