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Brevipalpus, flat mite, False spider mite, - Ali Baba, and anyone - help!


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Ok, updates.....

Photos of the plants in that spot.... ONLY the 2 Nepenthes in the first picture actually clearly had the mites, the other plants were isolated and sprayed as a precaution...

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https://photos.app.goo.gl/UFxdZg1oVnfjv9jp1

 

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https://photos.app.goo.gl/xagblmQzkXjpDTtr2

 

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https://photos.app.goo.gl/niFl0O4UjroqlvUv1

 

This the remains of the worst affected leaves, after chopping them off, putting them in a cup, and pouring boiling water over them...

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Then I removed all dead leaves and pitchers.

Again I used this, plus SB Plant Invigorator....

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https://photos.app.goo.gl/40MYDExfulcjY3LV2

 

At the moment they are all in quarantine.

Edited by Karsty
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1 hour ago, pirks said:

Just been reading the warning label. If in contact with skin - rinse for 20 minutes.

Well if that doesn't kill them then, nothing will.

Ok, I didn't rinse for 20 minutes. I take many warnings as over-cautious, not accurate (which is a pain, the over-cautious ones make you nonchalant about the accurate ones)

I do most of the time tell my customers I mite get to them tomorrow  - does that make me at risk?? :blink:

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  • 1 month later...

Hi Karsty

I think you probably abandoned the predatory mites a bit early, it takes a while for them to get going!

I'm not surprised you had a random occurrence of mites on the other side of the room. Brevipalpus don't spread very fast, but they are very easily transferred on skin and clothing when you handle plants, and of course if you move plants around...

The best way to totally eradicate them is probably to completely destroy any plants with mites and then spray the rest of the collection. I have found that plant oil based sprays are very effective. 3 sprays at 2 weekly intervals will get rid of any new hatchlings from eggs. As it is a contact spray you have to be very thorough, I think you would have to cut off any Nepenthes pitchers in case they act as a reservoir for mites or eggs. Also they love to hide under leaf sheaths, so peeling back any dead sheaths is important. The advantage is you wont poison yourself accidentally :biggrin:

If you have an infested plant that you cant bear to destroy, take  the smallest rootable cutting, dip it in spray and then remove all the visible eggs under a binocular microscope! Tedious but I have done this with cacti (received with mites and quarantined) and it works.

A couple of examples:

I have a lovely Phalaenopsis schilleriana which came from the nursery with mites. Un-noticed for a while...then I peeled back all the dead leaf sheaths sprayed it 3 times and it is now mite free and has been for 3 years. No sign of mites on any other orchids, but I am very careful to isolate new plants.

I was given a Cephalotus which turned out to have a bad infestation. I took root cuttings (mites don't live on the roots), and carefully inspected them for transferred mites/eggs before setting the cuttings. Now I have a lovely plant.

Hope it is going ok

cheers

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  • Karsty changed the title to Brevipalpus, flat mite, False spider mite, - Ali Baba, and anyone - help!

Ali - Do you really think 10 weeks was not enough time to give the Ambyselius time to do their job?

You will see that I carried out a certain amount of destruction with regard to the infested plants.

So would it be reliable to say that after hatching these mites will not produce eggs within 2 weeks? Even in the most favourable conditions?

Honestly, I'd rather poison myself slightly then recover than go through all of that trouble with the oil-based pesticide (would not SB Plant Invigorator do the same job?). Besides, I don't have a binocular microscope - not yet anyway! But I would not use any dangerous pesticides where they might harm bees.

You have my admiration for having both the time, and the patience, to carry out those procedures! The truth is, I would have the patience if I had the time and the right equipment.

There's not much info out there about Brevipalpus, but I stumbled upon this video, in case it is of assistance to anyone -

MissOrchidGirl - How to make and apply your own DIY insecticide for Orchids - Complete, step by step guide

Edited by Karsty
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