Not wishing to restart any bickering.
I'm just stating what I have observed.
Bought a new bag of Black Gold pure coco.
Took a clean garbage can and lined it with a new plastic bag.
Set the coco in that, cut a slit, removed about 2 liters for up-potting.
Sealed the bag, sealed the garbage bag, and put the snugly fitting lid on the can.
Went on about me business.
Plants start losing bottom leaf at an alarming rate.
I do the "what's wrong" dance for a while while it gets critical.
Then, Crap! a flyer.
Put a slice of potato on the surface and wait a day.
Here's what I find.
View attachment 217576
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See them eggs?
Had not opened the coco since the first opening.
When I pulled the lid and opened the garbage bag.
I thought I saw a flyer!
So I grabbed a cup of coco and ran it under the 'scope.
I'm here to say, that for whatever reason, RAs do seem to lay egg in coco.
Won't speculate on the actual vector, but the RA eggs in new coco is no myth.
I threw a few million nematodes at the flowering girls and used Imid on the veggers.
When the imid has broken down I'll hit them all with bacterial and fugal spores.
And I'll innoculate any future bags of coco with said spores because they kill the eggs too.
Anyroad, that's the plan.
Vill it Verk? V shell C.
The new growth looks promising.
Again, not looking for hubris, just stating observations.
Aloha,
Weeze
"You are sure those are broad mites weezard?"
Pretty sure.
Look at the egg in the first shot.
Those "bumps" say broad mites.
Cyclamen mites look similar but have smooth eggs .
I say, hit them with the Swirskii mites and make snuff videos.
Aloha,
Weeze
The potato test sounds like a great idea for getting an early warning.
As others have said, by the time you see damage the RAs are pretty well entrenched...