Doritis roots killing leaves
This morning while watering the herd, I noticed that my doritis are
sending out A LOT of aerial roots, and the the roots are punching through the leaves or bending the leaves so they will be forced to fall off. For instance, my Doritis buyssoniana, a very large plant, has seven pairs of leaves, and the bottom five pairs are being disturbed or destroyed by roots erupting from the "stem" of the plant. (The "stem" is a good seven inches in length from roots to crown.) Similarly, the Doritis pulcherrimas, which are a much smaller species, are all having the same problem. Other than this self-destructive behavior, the plants look healthy. Am I doing something wrong? Is this natural behavior? The plants are growing in a sunroom--either in natural light or flourescent light; the humdity ranges from 60% to nearly 80%; some plants are in S/H and others are in bark. |
Doritis roots killing leaves
In my opinion it is definitely a cultural issue - GOOD culture!
Any time you can get a plant to put out roots to that extent, it's not a bad thing. If you've ever seen monopodial epiphytes in nature, you'd realize that it's not at all that unusual. I have seen such growth in doritaenopsis hybrids, as well; those that are primaries with doritis, especially. To bring up a contrarian view I've heard - sometimes the growth of an extensive root system has been reported as an indicator that the plants are underfed. That is, they have to grow the extra roots to increase the odds that they will absorb more nutrition. -- Ray Barkalow - First Rays Orchids - www.firstrays.com Plants, Supplies, Artwork, Books and Lots of Free Info! "OrchidKitty" wrote in message oups.com... This morning while watering the herd, I noticed that my doritis are sending out A LOT of aerial roots, and the the roots are punching through the leaves or bending the leaves so they will be forced to fall off. For instance, my Doritis buyssoniana, a very large plant, has seven pairs of leaves, and the bottom five pairs are being disturbed or destroyed by roots erupting from the "stem" of the plant. (The "stem" is a good seven inches in length from roots to crown.) Similarly, the Doritis pulcherrimas, which are a much smaller species, are all having the same problem. Other than this self-destructive behavior, the plants look healthy. Am I doing something wrong? Is this natural behavior? The plants are growing in a sunroom--either in natural light or flourescent light; the humdity ranges from 60% to nearly 80%; some plants are in S/H and others are in bark. |
Doritis roots killing leaves
Regarding the root collar: plants in the Phalaenopsis subgenus Esmeralda do
this. It is one of this group's odd autopomorphies. Unlike other Phals in other sections of the genus, this group will produce a principle push of roots out of the stem in a collar all the way around the plant. Eric Christenson says in his book that (being terrestrial rather than epiphytic,) "this is presumably an adaptation to rooting in and rising above a fresh layer of leaf litter in nature". I don't know if I can connect the dieing lower leaves to this root production the way you have. First, when it happens to my plants in this group, leaves do not necessarily die as a result. Most often, the roots either push out and through the tissue or shove the leaves out of the way and come out from behind them. Because leaves are dying at the same time does not mean there is a relationship between the two observations or, if there is, that it works the way it first appears to. Maybe the older leaves began the process of abscission and in so doing produced chemicals that triggered the root growth rather than the other way around. "OrchidKitty" wrote in message oups.com... This morning while watering the herd, I noticed that my doritis are sending out A LOT of aerial roots, and the the roots are punching through the leaves or bending the leaves so they will be forced to fall off. For instance, my Doritis buyssoniana, a very large plant, has seven pairs of leaves, and the bottom five pairs are being disturbed or destroyed by roots erupting from the "stem" of the plant. (The "stem" is a good seven inches in length from roots to crown.) Similarly, the Doritis pulcherrimas, which are a much smaller species, are all having the same problem. Other than this self-destructive behavior, the plants look healthy. Am I doing something wrong? Is this natural behavior? The plants are growing in a sunroom--either in natural light or flourescent light; the humdity ranges from 60% to nearly 80%; some plants are in S/H and others are in bark. |
Doritis roots killing leaves
Ray and Al,
Thanks for the information! Now know I'm not doing something to kill my plants. Ray, I'm disinclined to think it's a lack of fertilizer--I'm pretty generous. BTW, the MSU formulation I got from you is great stuff. Al, the root production above the leaves of the buyssonniana is really amazing. Above the lower leaves, there are as many as five roots--nearly as thick as pencils---erupting from the stem. Because the roots' pressure on the leaves is forcing the leaves away from the stem, I am assuming the leaves will die, but maybe not. So, perhaps your theory of abscission triggering root growth might be right! |
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