I had my best yield ever with them in a run of blue dream. 2.1 per 1 k but it's frustrating to see the yellowing.
I had my best yield ever with them in a run of blue dream. 2.1 per 1 k but it's frustrating to see the yellowing.
https://www.icmag.com/ic/picture.php?albumid=53559&pictureid=1249997View Image
do they look like this under an hand lense?
Certainly NOT root aphids. Soil mites yes, root aphids no.
[URL=https://www.icmag.com/ic/picture.php?albumid=53559&pictureid=1249997&thumb=1]View Image[/url]
do they look like this under an hand lense?
Found some of these guys on a Jilly Bean cutting I just took in and am isolating I would also like to know if anyone has an idea what they are? I did some searching and could not find anything that looked like them but that pic is spot on exactly what this cutting has.
Found some of these guys on a Jilly Bean cutting I just took in and am isolating I would also like to know if anyone has an idea what they are? I did some searching and could not find anything that looked like them but that pic is spot on exactly what this cutting has.
those are mites that i thought were bulb mites at around 180-220x i cant remember. someone on another thread said they werent bulb mites but rather some innocuous soil mite.
Not sure, a regular magnifying glass isnt nearly strong enough, to look at spider mites in the past ive used a 8x20 Monocular inverted backwards to view bugs. This is about 20-30x I think. However the bugs are so small its still really hard to see what they look like.
I have a 60-100x scope around here somewhere, but at that zoom they are gonna move way to much. I need a proper 30x loupe.
We started chopping another room seperate than the ones Ive seen the majority of these bugs in, I found some in that room but not nearly as many. That round is best round in a while, gpw easy. I noticed in a tiny puddle of runoff removing one of the pots springtails and a few tiny little red/brown mite looking bugs. They would run into a springtail and both try to go opposite ways. Was interesting.
Even those with a PhD in entomology would have a hard time ID a soil mite with 100% accuracy. Each body part needs to examined under a microscope and compared to an existing database. Often new species are discovered. There are tens of thousands of known mites but that only accounts for about 5% of actual. So you see the futility of trying to ask the question of what kind of mite is this...I thought they were galic bulb mites but someone else said no. I found them with a potato slice test for aphids.