Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop.
Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 12:15*pm, Jack Schmidling wrote:
My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover..... If it is the actual leaf color, it is unlikely to be a fungus. It could be a genetic mutation that expresses itself as a variegated leaf. I would think the pattern rules out its being the result of a chemical spray Does the clover seem otherwise healthy? Virus diseases of clover usually cause yellowing or bronzing. J. Del Col |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
Jack Schmidling wrote:
My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com some virus diseases could do that. They are sometimes encouraged by tulip growers to make their plants more interesting. Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 8/26/08 12:15 PM, in article , "Jack Schmidling" wrote: My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com I've seen this before - seems to natural - it happens in my organic lawn. It's pretty Cheryl Dog or someone's urine? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 4:40*pm, Jerry Avins wrote:
Jack Schmidling wrote: My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK:http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silverhttp://schmidling.com some virus diseases could do that. They are sometimes encouraged by tulip growers to make their plants more interesting. There are mosaic viruses that hit clover, but they usually cause yellowing. I've seen virused roses and orchids. The color breaks aren't that neat. But it could be a virus-induced mutation. J. Del Col |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 6:37*pm, kate wrote:
Cheryl Isaak wrote: On 8/26/08 12:15 PM, in article , "Jack Schmidling" wrote: My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK:http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silverhttp://schmidling.com I've seen this before - seems to natural - it happens in my organic lawn. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 11:15*am, Jack Schmidling wrote:
My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK:http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silverhttp://schmidling.com I believe it is a Chimera, i.e. a mixture of tissues of different genetic make up in the same part of the plant, if I remember correctly it occurs in legume crops infrequently. There is another condition that occurs in alfalfa infected with stem nematode where a pure white leaf is produced. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 11:15*am, Jack Schmidling wrote:
My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK:http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silverhttp://schmidling.com I believe it is a Chimera, i.e. a mixture of tissues of different genetic make up in the same part of the plant, if I remember correctly it occurs in legume crops infrequently. There is another condition that occurs in alfalfa infected with stem nematode where a pure white leaf is produced. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Aug 26, 8:04*pm, Rick wrote:
On Aug 26, 11:15*am, Jack Schmidling wrote: My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK:http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silverhttp://schmidling.com I believe it is a Chimera, i.e. a mixture of tissues of different genetic make up in the same part of the plant, if I remember correctly it occurs in legume crops infrequently. *There is another condition that occurs in alfalfa infected with stem nematode where a pure white leaf is produced. Many apologies for the double post--news server problems. |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
On Tue, 26 Aug 2008 09:15:41 -0700 (PDT), Jack Schmidling
wrote: My first reaction to seeing this was bird poop. Upon closer examination, it is the true color of the leaves of this VERY white clover. There a few other similar cases in the general area where these are. I suspect some sort of fungus but would appreciate it if someone could identify it. js PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com Notice the (out of focus) white specs on the grass just left of the clover - overspray? How about the white mold/fungus that tends to grow on old straw? |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Another Mystery
"Kari Walters" wrote in message Notice the (out of focus) white specs on the grass just left of the clover - overspray? snipped That was also my thought also. Did someone paint a fence/chair/railing nearby? |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Mystery Disease? | Gardening | |||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Mystery Photo | Gardening | |||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Stinkhorn Mystery | Gardening | |||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Turnip Mystery | Gardening | |||
PHOTO OF THE WEEK, Sunflower Mystery | Gardening |