The appearance is classic for mite damage, and some are damned hard to see
without a magnifying glass or better device.
--
Ray Barkalow - First Rays Orchids -
www.firstrays.com
Plants, Supplies, Artwork, Books and Lots of Free Info!
"eeyore" wrote in message
...
Thanks,
Don't think it is insect, because if I look at it through a magnifying
glass, it looks more like a pitting of the leaves, than anything actually
on them. Tips and edges then turn brown, and then it is a matter of time.
Due to space considerations they were packed together, so in hindsight I
can understand that whatever it is would spread.
Thanks to all for responding.
"Steve" wrote in message
...
eeyore wrote:
Hello,
Sorry I can't post photos, but I'm wondering if anyone could
identify what would cause a white, almost powdery look, on the top of
the leaves. This leads to yellow leaves or black blotches on the leaves
and then a dropping of all the leaves. Roots look fine, but not sure
what chance I have with nothing but roots.
Started with my phal's but is expanding to all varieties. Very hot
summer here so at first I assumed it was sunburn, but since it continues
into the fall, it has to be something else.
Hope someone can help, I'm not a scientific grower, just been having
a lot of fun buying orchids that have dropped their blooms for a cheap
price, and getting them to rebloom. I was doing great, until whatever
this is took over.
Thanks!
Are you familiar enough with boisduval scale to rule that out? I'm pretty
sure that what you are describing is a much thinner layer than a what a
colony of scale would be. Still, if you didn't realize what you were
seeing and let it go, it sure can yellow the leaves and kill plants.
I searched the internet for a picture and the one on Ray's site was
better than most so I'll show that one:
http://www.firstrays.com/scale.htm
Steve