it allows root aphids to function
I have examined my rootball for months now and I see nothing and I have good eyes, I stopped reusing soil and still the problem persists.You said WRA. You may have a raging infestation and have none with wings or only a few. Most of their reproduction is from wingless adults giving live birth to wingless adults who are born pregnant, and so on. That's why they are so hard to control.
Usually they don't start making flyers until they infestation is so heavy that they need to expand their territory. Look for the tailpipes, and the RA flyers have a stubbier wide rear with the tailpipes. FG's have a pointed rear. Use yellow sticky traps for monitoring. Good luck. -granger
I have examined my rootball for months now and I see nothing and I have good eyes, I stopped reusing soil and still the problem persists.
the roots keep going brown and dying off, the problem is there is no real information on these things. You cant fight an enemy you cant identify. I would love to hug a broad mite right now!
you need like 100-200x minimum to see RAs in the medium (non-flyers). Your bare eyes aren't going to cut it unfortunately.
Well I suppose I am beating a dead horse here but...Ok thank you for the reply, so my problem could be root aphids even if there is nothing visible to the naked eye!
I have come to the conclusion the roots are damaged under the base of the stem and I am seeing the resultant die off at the extremities of the feeder roots!
What size are root aphids compared to broad mites?
Then there is no way I have root aphids. I have been studying my rootballs for months now, I never see anything besides fungus gnat larvae and soil mites!Much bigger. You can see them. BMs: microscopic.
Soil mites and broad mites are two completely different "animals". Life exists as we know because of soil mites but broad mites are a pest to many commercial crops.Then there is no way I have root aphids. I have been studying my rootballs for months now, I never see anything besides fungus gnat larvae and soil mites!
I have known the broads intimately for over two years now, anything larger than a broad mite I would have seen by now!