Came back from Scales the other day with several bunches of Potamogeton gayi. I put a bunch of it in one of my tanks, but saved some for a second tank but didn't have time to get to it over the weekend. So I threw it in a bucket with some water just to keep it alive until I had time to put it in the tank.
Well this morning I was doing some tank work and was about to move it when I noticed what looked to be a bug sitting on one of the plants in the bucket. Upon closer inspection, the plants were covered in these little bugs...dozens and dozens of them.
I'll attach two pics, one for the sake of showing the size and a second which is the best close-up I could get with my camera.
Any ideas? Should I be worried about these at all?
bugs on my plants
bugs on my plants
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Fr. John Paul Walker, O.P.
- Ltrepeter2000
- Posts: 1555
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:22 am
- Real Name: Rob Peterson
- Location: Sterling, VA
- Contact:
Virginia Tech
Department of Entomology
Blacksburg, VA 24061
Phone: (540) 231-6341
FAX: (540) 231-9131
There was an email but it was a specific person and not a generic VT email so I thought it better if you called to get a specific person that is going to be there as emails are sometimes not updated.
Department of Entomology
Blacksburg, VA 24061
Phone: (540) 231-6341
FAX: (540) 231-9131
There was an email but it was a specific person and not a generic VT email so I thought it better if you called to get a specific person that is going to be there as emails are sometimes not updated.
Robert Peterson
"Mr. Sarcastic"
The work will wait while you show a child a rainbow,
but the rainbow wont wait while you do the work
-Unknown-
"Mr. Sarcastic"
The work will wait while you show a child a rainbow,
but the rainbow wont wait while you do the work
-Unknown-
- DelawareJim
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- Real Name: Jim Michaels
- Location: Southeast PA
Aphids. They're feeding on the emersed parts of the plants.
There are over 4,000 species of aphids so I can't be more specific. Anyway the cure is the same regardless. Put a drop of dish detergent in the bucket to break the water tension, keep everything submerged for about an hour or so and you should be good to go.
Cheers.
Jim
There are over 4,000 species of aphids so I can't be more specific. Anyway the cure is the same regardless. Put a drop of dish detergent in the bucket to break the water tension, keep everything submerged for about an hour or so and you should be good to go.
Cheers.
Jim
- sherrymitchell
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- Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2003 3:12 am
- Location: Northern Virginia
Thanks for the ID, but I'm a little hesitant to put any sort of detergent with plants that are going into my tanks, especially my dwarf shrimp tank (which is where these are destined). I would think it could be difficult to get all the last remnants of the detergent off the plants even with lots of rinsing.DelawareJim wrote: Anyway the cure is the same regardless. Put a drop of dish detergent in the bucket to break the water tension, keep everything submerged for about an hour or so and you should be good to go.
I'm wondering if something else would work, maybe a dip into a hydrogen peroxide solution or something of that sort.
Fr. John Paul Walker, O.P.
- sherrymitchell
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- Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2003 3:12 am
- Location: Northern Virginia