hello this my 1st grow in a tent im using a 400w hps blub and have a mix of soil and perlite im about 12 weeks in and not long flowered when wating with biobizz seen tiny white maggots with legs in the water tray. CAN ANYONE HELP??
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hello this my 1st grow in a tent im using a 400w hps blub and have a mix of soil and perlite im about 12 weeks in and not long flowered when wating with biobizz seen tiny white maggots with legs in the water tray. CAN ANYONE HELP??
Hey yual got lucky them the good eatin ones!!!!Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
No just yankin yur ankle pilgrem be some sort of larva and cant be rememberin if they be related to those afid flyn bugs but some pilgrem here be havin an answer for right quick I would imagine. Good luck my friend be hopin yu get all fixed up quick..
BWD
Here is a pic of my beauty i found these in.As you can see it looks ok.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
Nice yual got no health problems with this one be findin these little critters near the enb be a bonus fur ya now we just need a pilgrem be tellin yual what they are and how to getem out be recommendin a straw but hey just me ;) someone be long soon.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
Very nice plant be proud of that one
BWD
lol.. Thanks mate at last il can sleep tonight. Iv looked them up but cant find what they are?Quote:
Originally Posted by BackWoodDrifter
Dont know if this here will help yual out at this point but in the future try sterilized play sand i use about 1-2 inches to cover the soil and never get critter problems might even sufficate this here critters maybe. next time use the sand and avoid the issues :thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
BWD
...Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
Quote:
Springtails are well known as pests of some agricultural crops. Sminthurus viridis, the 'lucerne flea', has been shown to cause severe damage to agricultural crops, and is considered as a pest in Australia. Also Onychiuridae are known to feed on tubers and to damage them to some extent. However, by their capacity to carry spores of mycorrhizal fungi and mycorrhiza-helper bacteria on their tegument, soil springtails play a positive role in the establishment of plant-fungal symbioses and thus are beneficial to agriculture. They also contribute to controlling plant fungal diseases through their active consumption of mycelia and spores of damping-off and pathogenic fungi. It has been suggested that they could be reared to be used for the control of pathogenic fungi in greenhouses and other indoor cultures.
Springtail - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See Mellow my good friend Tev be the smart one today! Thanks for pipin in Tev and spreadin good knowledge be helpin out this here pilgrem :thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by tevfik
BWD
Thanks guys i still almost had a heart attack when i saw them lol...:thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by tevfik
;)Quote:
Originally Posted by Mellowyellow1st
BWD