Please help

We have some unique pests to deal with in Australia. Post your experiences and treatments here for others to learn from.
Post Reply
Joe.sab
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 86
Joined: August 18th, 2017, 1:18 pm
Favorite Species: Azalea
Bonsai Age: 6
Location: Sydney

Please help

Post by Joe.sab »

Hi all,
I got these fungus on all my garden plants bonsais and training pots, i did search on the net and found they call genat fungus, and they coming because of the moisture of the soil! I got oil neem to control it but not works properly, what you guys use for these, they seems over the soil mostly,
Any advice appreciated
Joe
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
terryb
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 563
Joined: April 29th, 2016, 3:44 pm
Bonsai Age: 4
Bonsai Club: SA Bonsai Society; VNBC
Location: Adelaide
Has thanked: 529 times
Been thanked: 201 times

Re: Please help

Post by terryb »

Not fungus but small flies called "fungus gnats". Not sure that the adults do any harm, apart from being annoying in large numbers. The juveniles which are small maggots in the soil will eat plant roots but this is probably only an issue for small seedlings/cuttings. These are common if you have very damp potting mixes with lots of organic material. You can add more inorganic material to your soil and also let it dry out a little more to make it less attractive. Other websites indicate beneficial predators can help as well as just reducing the population with some sticky yellow traps.
Joe.sab
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 86
Joined: August 18th, 2017, 1:18 pm
Favorite Species: Azalea
Bonsai Age: 6
Location: Sydney

Re: Please help

Post by Joe.sab »

terryb wrote:Not fungus but small flies called "fungus gnats". Not sure that the adults do any harm, apart from being annoying in large numbers. The juveniles which are small maggots in the soil will eat plant roots but this is probably only an issue for small seedlings/cuttings. These are common if you have very damp potting mixes with lots of organic material. You can add more inorganic material to your soil and also let it dry out a little more to make it less attractive. Other websites indicate beneficial predators can help as well as just reducing the population with some sticky yellow traps.
Thanks terryb, yes that’s what the web says as well but im looking for an treatment for this, the problem is that all this week and last week is raining and that’s what make the soil too dump, anyway thanks for the info mate,
Cheers
Joe.sab
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 86
Joined: August 18th, 2017, 1:18 pm
Favorite Species: Azalea
Bonsai Age: 6
Location: Sydney

Re: Please help

Post by Joe.sab »

Today tried the neem oil on all my cuttings and seedlings lats see what happens :fc:
Post Reply

Return to “Pests and Diseases”