This scale is often associated with ants which feed on the honeydew excreted and defend the insects from attack by
predators such as
lady beetles. The relationship between
Pheidole ants and
Coccus viridis in Hawaii is
mutualistic. In trials involving adding lady beetle larvae and carnivorous
lepidopteran larvae to plants infested with green scale with or without ants being present, it was found that the ants actively removed both kinds of larvae, usually within an hour of introduction. The direct effect of this was an increase in scale reproductive success and the indirect effect was a decrease in scale mortality resulting from the removal of predators and a decrease in parasitism rates. Another research study conducted in the field found a positive correlation between the presence of ants on host plants and the success of green scale insects. On coffee trees from which ants had been excluded the number of scale insects had declined after fifty days and after seventy days, none remained, whereas scales had thrived on ant-infested trees. A study found that the entomopathogenic fungus,
Lecanicillium lecanii, was highly effective in controlling coffee green scale. A study examined the effect of the fungus on coffee green scale in combination with lower than normal applications of either of two insecticides,
fenthion and
phosphamidon. The use of fenthion resulted in the highest percentage mortality of the scales at the lowest dosages of insecticide. The results from the use of phosamidon were inconclusive, with the results differing in the laboratory and the field. ==References==