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MagazineJuly 4, 2026 · 6 min read

Biological plant protection: prevent, strengthen, chemicals last

A garden is not a battlefield. How a clear ladder of prevent, strengthen, encourage beneficials and deter mechanically keeps most problems from ever growing large, and why the chemical hammer is the very last step.

The Gartenkern team
Garden & editorial
Vielfältiges Gemüsebeet mit Salat, Zwiebeln und Mangold, geschützt durch ein Drahtnetz
Ein vielfältiges, gesundes Beet mit Schutznetz: gelebter biologischer Pflanzenschutz · Foto: HARTLEPOOLMARINA2014, CC BY-SA 4.0
Contents

A garden is not a battlefield. Whoever reaches for the spray at every pest destroys the very balance that would otherwise do the work for them. Biological plant protection thinks the other way round: it builds a resilient garden in which problems rarely grow large.

That sounds like a lot of effort, but it is above all a question of order. Instead of reacting when things are already on fire, you start beforehand in the right places. This article gives you the big picture and links the matching detail editions for the commonest cases.

Diverse vegetable bed with lettuce, onions and chard, protected by wire netting
Diversity and netting instead of spray · Photo: HARTLEPOOLMARINA2014, CC BY-SA 4.0

From fighting to preventing

The classic mistake is to think about plant protection only once the damage is there. Then often only chemicals remain, and they hit the pest's predators as well. The result is a garden that grows ever more dependent on the next spray.

Biological plant protection turns the logic around. It first asks: why does the problem arise at all? Usually there is a cause behind it, an over-fed plant, a wrong site, missing diversity. Fix the cause and the pest often takes care of itself.

The stages of biological plant protection

Picture a ladder. You start right at the bottom and climb only as high as is truly needed. Most of the time you stay on the lower rungs.

  1. Prevent

    The most important stage. Healthy soil, resistant varieties, the right plant in the right place, crop rotation and mixed cropping. Whoever is careful here saves almost all the rest.

  2. Strengthen

    Vigorous plants defend themselves better. A balanced feed that is not too nitrogen-heavy, even watering and plant tonics from herbal brews make the tissue resilient.

  3. Encourage beneficials

    Ladybirds, lacewings, hedgehogs and birds do the pest control for free. Flowering islands, hiding places and a poison-free bed bring them into the garden and keep them there.

  4. Observe and deter mechanically

    Go through the bed regularly. Hand-collecting, a strong jet of water, barriers, nets and glue bands stop many pests, without any product at all.

  5. Use gentle remedies in a targeted way

    If that is not enough, gentle means come in: soft soap against aphids, wettable sulphur against mildew, predatory mites and nematodes. Always targeted and only at the affected spot.

  6. Chemicals as the very last exception

    Only when everything else fails and the crop is at risk do you reach for an approved chemical product, as beneficial-sparing as possible and strictly by the instructions.

Prevention is half the battle

The lowest rungs of the ladder carry the most. A few cornerstones decide whether your garden is susceptible or robust.

The cornerstones of a robust garden

  • Choose robust varieties

    Look for resistant or tolerant varieties when you buy. With mildew, late blight or scab, the choice of variety is the biggest lever of all.

  • Rotation and mixed cropping

    Do not grow crops in the same spot year after year and mix them cleverly. Diversity slows pests that are specialised on one plant.

  • Site and spacing

    The right plant in the right place, sunny or shady, and with enough space. Airy stands dry off quickly and fall ill less often.

  • Care for the soil

    A living, humus-rich soil with compost and mulch produces healthy plants. Healthy plants are the best prevention against everything.

Strengthen and encourage beneficials

Once soil and site are right, you can arm the plants further. Herbal liquid feeds and brews from nettle or horsetail strengthen the tissue and make it more resistant to fungi and suckers. They are no miracle cure, but a good building block.

A stand of green stinging nettles with toothed leaves
Nettle and horsetail provide the basis for strengthening plant brews and liquid feeds.· Photo: Dominicus Johannes Bergsma, CC BY-SA 4.0

But the strongest ally already lives in the garden, or is only waiting for an invitation: the beneficials. Where ladybirds, lacewings and hoverflies are at home, an aphid plague hardly breaks out. How to offer them a lasting habitat you can read in detail in Encouraging beneficials.

Hoverfly with yellow-black markings sitting on a flower
The hoverfly pollinates and, as a larva, devours aphids. Flowering islands draw such helpers into the garden.· Photo: Alvesgaspar, CC BY-SA 3.0

If something does turn up

Despite all prevention, not every summer is perfect. For the commonest cases the magazine has a detailed guide each, all built on the very ladder described here.

The detail editions

Prevent, strengthen, encourage, and only then intervene. The best plant protection is a garden that keeps itself in balance.

The core rule of biological plant protection

Frequently asked questions

What exactly does biological plant protection mean?

A staged approach that relies on prevention, healthy plants and natural enemies and uses chemicals only as the very last exception. The goal is a balance in the garden, not a sterile state without insects.

Do I then have to give up sprays entirely?

Not necessarily, but they sit at the end of the ladder. In the vast majority of cases you manage with prevention, mechanical defence and gentle remedies. Chemicals are the rare exception in the event of real crop loss.

How do I best start?

With prevention. Choose robust varieties, keep the rotation, mix the crops and care for the soil with compost and mulch. Then lay out a flowering island for beneficials. That is the base on which everything else builds.

Are home remedies like brews really effective?

As a plant tonic yes, as sole control usually not. Nettle and horsetail brews make plants more resilient but do not replace a targeted measure in a heavy attack. They are a building block, not a cure-all.

Does a little infestation really do no harm?

A healthy garden takes a light infestation in its stride, and often it is even useful, because it feeds the beneficials. Only when a pest gets out of hand and threatens the crop is intervention needed. A perfectly pest-free garden is neither achievable nor desirable.

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