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#1
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CarolineC
I have a lemon tree in my garden in South Africa. The leaves have what looks like a black fungus and also white sticky "cotton" looking nasties. All this is under the leaves. Can anyone help and tell me what to do please?
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#2
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CarolineC
On 28 Jan, 11:04, Jennifer Sparkes wrote:
Sounds as if it could be Scale Insect/Mealy Bug and Sooty Mould. Any chance you could post a photo? Sounds like it indeed. I hate them. I've used soapy water and a sponge on one of our office plants, delicately removing them, using my nails if necessary and rising each leaves afterwards. Looked great for a few weeks but they're back. I'm wondering if they are in the soil (?). On our acer, it worked well, using a tooth brush and spraying soapy water. They all went, but this plant was outside. I think it's harder in greenhouse/indoor. |
#3
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CarolineC
In article ,
says... I have a lemon tree in my garden in South Africa. The leaves have what looks like a black fungus and also white sticky "cotton" looking nasties. All this is under the leaves. Can anyone help and tell me what to do please? Sounds like a mealy bug infestation, if the tree is small enough you can brush them off using an old tooth brush, but as your climate is a lot warmer you should be able to use one of the biological controls, you will have to look locally for information as some of the insects which are safe for us to use because they die in winter might not where you are. the most common predator of mealy bug in use is a small brown australian ladybird. Are none of your local birds interested? -- Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and Lapageria rosea |
#4
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CarolineC
Anne Jackson wrote:
The message from CarolineC contains these words: I have a lemon tree in my garden in South Africa. The leaves have what looks like a black fungus and also white sticky "cotton" looking nasties. All this is under the leaves. Can anyone help and tell me what to do please? I doubt very much if anyone in *the United Kingdom* has a lemon tree in their garden... What did you think "UK" stands for? Do you have broken glass scattered around your garden? What a cow! -- huLLy Tel: 07976 123278 |
#6
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CarolineC
"CarolineC" wrote I have a lemon tree in my garden in South Africa. The leaves have what looks like a black fungus and also white sticky "cotton" looking nasties. All this is under the leaves. Can anyone help and tell me what to do please? All Citrus trees are susceptible to Scale Insect which excrete "Honeydew" loved by ants and on which Sooty Moulds flourish. The white woolly bits on the leaves and stems are the Scale Insects in breeding phase. If it's not too big a tree and you don't like chemicals you can spray them off with a sprayer filled with water with a few drops of washing up liquid. Pump it right up so it's a powerful jet and start at the top and do every leaf and stem. If it's a big tree and/or you don't mind chemicals then go see your local Garden Centre for something that works on Scale. They will come back, they always do on Citrus, so it's not a once only job. This is a UK Newsgroup but don't let that put you off. :-) -- Regards Bob Hobden 17mls W. of London.UK |
#7
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CarolineC
Well. I've got a lemon, orange, kumquat and lime-quat growing outside
here and periodically they get scale infestation that can be followed by sooty mould. This spreads and is nourished by the sugar-rich exudate produced by scale insects and mealy bugs. I'll concur with the remedies already suggested, although in the absence of a natural predator to deal with the mealy bug, you may have to resort to a systemic insecticidal spray if the lemon is a large plant/tree. You will need to check your local garden centres for suitable products since they are unlikely to be the same as those available in the UK. Since our climate appears to be getting increasingly milder and now easily capable of sustaining lemons out of doors in the south at least, your question is relevant and the problems you've experienced also occur with UK plants grown under glass anywhere. |
#8
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CarolineC
"Bob Hobden" wrote in message
All Citrus trees are susceptible to Scale Insect which excrete "Honeydew" loved by ants and on which Sooty Moulds flourish. The white woolly bits on the leaves and stems are the Scale Insects in breeding phase. If it's not too big a tree and you don't like chemicals you can spray them off with a sprayer filled with water with a few drops of washing up liquid. Pump it right up so it's a powerful jet and start at the top and do every leaf and stem. If it's a big tree and/or you don't mind chemicals then go see your local Garden Centre for something that works on Scale. They will come back, they always do on Citrus, so it's not a once only job. To add to Bob's excellent post, I would advise that you control the ants (and there will be ants as they 'farm' the scale insects and spread them). White Oil will kill the sooty mould and this can be made up at home - dozens of recipes for it on the Net. |
#9
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CarolineC
On Jan 28, 8:10 pm, Martin wrote:
Isn;t the problem that Caroline posts to Garden Banter and Garden Banter copies her posts here without Caroline's knowledge? Probably true, although I don't see that her post is a problem, nor is it O/T for here since plants grown under glass frequently suffer from the same pests. A few months of being pre-occupied with other things often results in unpleasant discoveries once the attention is re- focussed |
#10
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CarolineC
"CarolineC" wrote in message ... I have a lemon tree in my garden in South Africa. The leaves have what looks like a black fungus and also white sticky "cotton" looking nasties. All this is under the leaves. Can anyone help and tell me what to do please? CarolineC Try looking here Caroline :~) http://tinyurl.com/2ppv5r Jenny |
#11
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Thanks. Yes I do live in the Uk, but have a house in SA too.
Thanks for your help. I will try the washing up liquid first! Quote:
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#12
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Quote:
CarolineC |