Mites have long been a trouble for tea plantations in Zhangping, a county-level city in Southeast China's Fujian province, reducing tea yields and farmers'incomes.
The city has more than 6,000 hectares of tea plantations and a tea industry valued at 2 billion yuan ($301.7 million).
To improve the quality of its tea products, Zhangping introduced predatory mites to the tea plantations in 2008. The predatory mites prey on the mite pests in a kind of bio-control through natural enemies.
The technologies that led to predatory mites came from Zhang Yanxuan, a researcher at the Fujian Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
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Zhang Yanxuan (right), researcher at the Fujian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, checks the quality of the tea in the plantation after introduction of predatory mites.[photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn] |