Key points about mites
- Mites are arachnids, the group to which spiders and ticks belong; they are not insects.
- Mites are oval-shaped and tiny, usually barely visible without magnification. Body color varies, often pale or yellowish, brown, purplish, orange, or red.
- All mites have piercing-sucking (straw-like) mouthparts.
- Some mites feed on plants and are considered pests, while others are beneficial predators or detritivores (feed on organic matter and recycle nutrients). Plant-feeding mites puncture plant cells and consume their contents, and can be found indoors and outdoors. Predatory mites hunt prey like spider mites, nematodes, or juvenile insects. Detritivores help to decompose fallen plant leaves and consume algae, fungi, and bacteria.
- Plant damage from mite feeding ranges from mild to severe. Mites can be hard to get rid of since they reproduce rapidly, use a wide range of host plants, and readily become resistant to pesticides. Spider mites are small and typically live on leaf undersides, so they often go undetected until plant symptoms become severe.
Identifying mites
- Mites are very small, with an oval or rounded shape, usually less than 1/16 of an inch long (1-2 mm). Some velvet mite species are closer to 4 mm in length, while some spider mites are less than a millimeter. Mite legs are generally easy to see with magnification.
- Body color varies between species and ranges from near-white or greenish-yellow to tan-brown, purplish, orange, or red.
- Mites move around by walking; they cannot jump or fly. Given their tiny size, they can also be carried on the wind. Some mites produce fine silk (like spider mite species) that they crawl on to move about the plant.
- Leg number varies by age and species, though most mites have either six (in larvae, the youngest juvenile stage) or eight legs. Exceptions include the eriophyid mite group, which only have four legs as adults. The shorter leg-like appendages in front of the mouth between the front legs are pedipalps, a feature shared with other arachnids. They help them sense their environment, similar to insect antennae.

Illustration: John Davidson, UMD Department of Entomology