Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
I have some Cosmos grown from seed and now planted out.
Each night another one or two are being bitten off around 4-5" off the ground and most of the leaves on the fallen bit left uneaten. I am trying to puzzle out what is doing this. I have a wildlife camera but pointed it at the wrong area last night (too much down angle). I will try again tonight. However I'm struggling with the logic of something snipping off the top of the plant but then not eating it. Any ideas? Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
In message , David
writes I have some Cosmos grown from seed and now planted out. Each night another one or two are being bitten off around 4-5" off the ground and most of the leaves on the fallen bit left uneaten. I am trying to puzzle out what is doing this. I have a wildlife camera but pointed it at the wrong area last night (too much down angle). I will try again tonight. However I'm struggling with the logic of something snipping off the top of the plant but then not eating it. Any ideas? Cheers Dave R The obvious likely answer is 'slugs'. They might simply enjoy the juicy stems more than the chewy leaves. A few slug pellets (and the resulting corpses in the morning) should confirm this. Or ants, and ant powder? -- Ian |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , David writes I have some Cosmos grown from seed and now planted out. Each night another one or two are being bitten off around 4-5" off the ground and most of the leaves on the fallen bit left uneaten. I am trying to puzzle out what is doing this. I have a wildlife camera but pointed it at the wrong area last night (too much down angle). I will try again tonight. However I'm struggling with the logic of something snipping off the top of the plant but then not eating it. Any ideas? Cheers Dave R The obvious likely answer is 'slugs'. They might simply enjoy the juicy stems more than the chewy leaves. A few slug pellets (and the resulting corpses in the morning) should confirm this. Or ants, and ant powder? My gues would be mice, ofter have trouble with mice nipping off young brassica plants hardening off and this year the same thing has happened to my giant carrots, know it was mice as I have caught six of the b****** this year! Phil --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
On 02/06/2018 22:39, philgurr wrote:
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , David writes I have some Cosmos grown from seed and now planted out. Each night another one or two are being bitten off around 4-5" off the ground and most of the leaves on the fallen bit left uneaten. I am trying to puzzle out what is doing this. I have a wildlife camera but pointed it at the wrong area last night (too much down angle). I will try again tonight. However I'm struggling with the logic of something snipping off the top of the plant but then not eating it. Any ideas? Cheers Dave R The obvious likely answer is 'slugs'. They might simply enjoy the juicy stems more than the chewy leaves. A few slug pellets (and the resulting corpses in the morning) should confirm this. Or ants, and ant powder? My gues would be mice, ofter have trouble with mice nipping off young brassica plants hardening off and this year the same thing has happened to my giant carrots, know it was mice as I have caught six of the b****** this year! Phil --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com I would also go for field mice, though they should be called harvester mice as they often cut down plants and build a stockpile of food for harder times. You could look at the cut off stems for signs of how they have been eaten, slugs tend to leave a smooth bite where as mice leave groves from their teeth. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Something biting stems of plants
On Sat, 02 Jun 2018 23:18:05 +0100, David wrote:
On 02/06/2018 22:39, philgurr wrote: "Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , David writes I have some Cosmos grown from seed and now planted out. Each night another one or two are being bitten off around 4-5" off the ground and most of the leaves on the fallen bit left uneaten. I am trying to puzzle out what is doing this. I have a wildlife camera but pointed it at the wrong area last night (too much down angle). I will try again tonight. However I'm struggling with the logic of something snipping off the top of the plant but then not eating it. Any ideas? Cheers Dave R The obvious likely answer is 'slugs'. They might simply enjoy the juicy stems more than the chewy leaves. A few slug pellets (and the resulting corpses in the morning) should confirm this. Or ants, and ant powder? My gues would be mice, ofter have trouble with mice nipping off young brassica plants hardening off and this year the same thing has happened to my giant carrots, know it was mice as I have caught six of the b****** this year! Phil --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com I would also go for field mice, though they should be called harvester mice as they often cut down plants and build a stockpile of food for harder times. You could look at the cut off stems for signs of how they have been eaten, slugs tend to leave a smooth bite where as mice leave groves from their teeth. Possibly not mice. The wildlife camera worked this time after I adjusted the mounting. Only two short videos around 22:00 last night. The first one might have been triggered by a moth but the second on (soon after) was by a hedge pig! I'm reasonably confident that the camera will capture mouse activity because we used it to track a mouse infestation of a kitchen (not ours) a few years back. I will investigate further - I think the stems might be being slugged up towards the top and then breaking at a point where they are weakened enough for the top to overload the remaining stem - probably about where woody turns to fleshy. If this is what is happening I'm still not sure why the slugs aren't then eating the tops. Anyway, I hope a hedge pig is better than slug pellets. Not keen on the pellets in case they poison Spiny Norman. Cheers David -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
What's biting us? | United Kingdom | |||
Nasty biting insect? | United Kingdom | |||
Biting the Bullet on Pesticides...Opinions, Please | Orchids | |||
Crazy flies buzzing & biting | Gardening | |||
Nail-biting time | Texas |