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Aloha gardeners, we've been seeing a black film on certain plants in Nanawale and Leilani subdivisions. Whatever it is, it's coating the plants with a black film, doesn't seem to be bothering the plants, but sure makes them look ugly. Any thoughts?
Dot
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That's what I thought, but why is it showing up now? I've been a part-timer for 9 years, this is the first I've noticed it this bad. Guessing Neem oil would clean it up, but there's a lot of it!
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does it look like this
http://www.downgardenservices.org.uk/Sootymould.jpg
then its sooty mold. it's rarely fatal to the plants but it does make them look fugly.
Aloha
Aloha
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I managed to clean up a small tree using a spray bottle with water and a little *non-ultra* dish soap. It took several applications.
*Ultra dish soap can remove the waxy coating from leaves, harming or killing the plant.
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2-3 applications of Neem 10 years ago changed our citrus from black to green. The mold never came back.
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You probably have fire ants on those plants. They "farm" that white stuff, aphids and mold. It's a big food source for them. I had it bad on some foxtails. I sprayed with liquid copper and sticker solution and treated for the fire ants. No more mold, aphids or that nasty "white stuff".
Puna: Our roosters crow first
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It's also called sooty mold. It grows on honeydew (read: excretia) from, most commonly, aphids, scale and mealybugs.
The mold itself isn't harmful unless it's really bad and interfering with transpiration or photosynthesis- in which case your plant is already doomed from the sucking insects. Try a hort oil, or soap, preferably on a cool(ish) or cloudy day, and focus on the insects rather than the mold.
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Glassnumbers: yes, it looks like the picture, sooty mold.
My friends in Leilani have lived there for 30 years, they started seeing it about a year and a half ago. I noticed it on my Nanawale plants about the same time. My next door neighbor has a fire ant extermination business, so definitely not fire ants...one of the perks of having them for neighbors :-)
Maybe if it ever rains again...whatever bugs are causing it will drown! Mahalo nui loa for the input Punatics.