Theres good info then there's bad info....was keeping the cube out of the water as to not drown the plant..(thought this was causing the leaves to droop and brown at the end (earlier on) I'll raise the water level.
Please, if you don't know, then dont confuse newbies with bad Info. This isn't the first case I've seen and I'm trying to be as nice as possible.The bubbles from the air stone keep the plant from drowning bro...
The little silver worm things dont only attack soil, those flys will lay in any surface thats wet and has roots. Ive seen it in rockwool and in grow pebbles. From the picture of your roots they dont look normal too me, you can see some of them look to have got thick and have strange bending at points and seem to have node like thick tissue growth at some of the bends.Overnight numbers settled to 6.05 pH, and 414 TDS... 1.0ml pH Down added... 5.30,,,445. pH will continue to creep... probably head back to 5.6 to5.7.
No soil was used in this grow. If soil born root maggots of some sort, I can examine under microscope.View attachment 5402453View attachment 5402454
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Since I did see that fly in the chamber this morning... and did remember seeing it before,, it makes sense that this type of biological attack could occur and by-pass UV measures in place to keep algae and fungus under control. Also of interest that the same death scenario played out with the last grow attempt. I'll keep a precautionary fine mesh netting over the next grow for its first few weeks, and make a point to kill anything that walks, crawls, or flies about in the grow chamber. I wonder if I should keep a precautionary level of H2O2 ( say ~20-40 ppm ) in the water for the first weeks prior to nutrients as well. This worms probably could not live in such an environment. The wool fiber should wick up the hydrogen peroxide. If not wicking, I will dropper feed the water to the wool fiber cube from the top.The little silver worm things dont only attack soil, those flys will lay in any surface thats wet and has roots. Ive seen it in rockwool and in grow pebbles. From the picture of your roots they dont look normal too me, you can see some of them look to have got thick and have strange bending at points and seem to have node like thick tissue growth at some of the bends.
If i was in your position id start again. Plamts can survive from that issue but they rarely ever get back to the full potential and will take a long long time to start kicking out of the dwarf like symptoms.
H202 is a good tool to use in hydro consitently. You only need to add a small dose once or twice a week if done regular to maintain good conditions.Since I did see that fly in the chamber this morning... and did remember seeing it before,, it makes sense that this type of biological attack could occur and by-pass UV measures in place to keep algae and fungus under control. Also of interest that the same death scenario played out with the last grow attempt. I'll keep a precautionary fine mesh netting over the next grow for its first few weeks, and make a point to kill anything that walks, crawls, or flies about in the grow chamber. I wonder if I should keep a precautionary level of H2O2 ( say ~20-40 ppm ) in the water for the first weeks prior to nutrients as well. This worms probably could not live in such an environment. The wool fiber should wick up the hydrogen peroxide. If not wicking, I will dropper feed the water to the wool fiber cube from the top.
I thought root rot was associated with darker roots.This is not hard to figure out. You pushed a young plant too hard and drowned it. Classic example of root rot.
What ppm level do you select as a target midpoint ?H202 is a good tool to use in hydro consitently. You only need to add a small dose once or twice a week if done regular to maintain good conditions.
You can cover the top of your rockwool with some plastic with some small slits cut out for air and water if you have to top feed. They even sell covers for rockwool cubes with little cutouts for your water and air to get through. But thick plastic works too just use plastic thats light proof.
I did use to use old thin clothing material or cheep curtain neting in my pots and covering the top on plants grown in pots outdoors. It would stop anything i didnt want from geting into the growing media used.
Yes that's what I told you to do before. Hydroton.Going to use coco/meat moss cube next time. Running bleach thru the system today. Any advantage to using clay/pumice rocks to surround the cube ??
I recon your on the money there..Root rot. Still some white roots. But plant is toast. Too wet, for too long.
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