| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Is this root knot nematode? |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
I dug up eight small rooted layers/suckers around a fig tree this spring that the owner described as a yellow/white good for fresh eating. They are in pots and rank in size from 6" to 2'. |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
Take cutting and re-root and destroy the soil in the pots. You can throw it away or if you want to reuse it nuke it. |
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Tonycm
Registered: Posts: 922 |
I would plant it in a pot, then do an air layer. Once the air layer is growing good remove it from the parent tree then destroy the infected tree, soil and all. If you are going to reuse the pots I would wash them out with hot water and let them dry a few days or better yet put them aside and use them next year to be safe. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
Were I to go through with my plan to graft the pictured plant into my big tree, roots and all, would the big tree be contaminated, or is RKN strictly a soil-borne, root-harbored disease? This is theorectical, as I likely wouldn't take the chance anyway. Just curious. |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
RKN are worms that live in the roots. If you cut open one of the root knots you should see tiny tiny worms come out. They live in the roots. Taking a cutting or air-layering won't transfer them to the new tree. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
Right, but If I were to graft the pictured specimen into a large host tree, incorporating the root into the graft, would the nematodes survive and spread within the tree? Just a question about the nature of the nematodes themselves. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
I will be air layering the two trees large enough to do so, and try rooting cuttings and grafting the rest. |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
They could maybe spread within the tree's water vascular tunnels. They will most likely end up back in the roots. I think the actaully nematode is too big, but the eggs might make it. I wouldn't try it at all. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
Done and done with the air layering |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,718 |
I have seen trees that have lumpy bumpy bark above the soil line that were infected with RKN. I would inspect the airlayers root system a bit down the road when you up-pot them just to be safe. |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
brackishfigger, |
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Darkman
Registered: Posts: 629 |
If your galls were on the extremeties could you remove those roots, sanitize the rest and replant in clean medium? Unless there were J2's present you might could save a small plant that might be two small for air layering or would it be better to let it grow out hoping to get it large enough to air layer? |
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7deuce
Registered: Posts: 566 |
When I did this operation I cleaned the area pretty good and covered the infested soil with turface and some plastic wrap. You have to be careful that the infected soil doesn't splash into the new soil when watering or raining. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
I have moved the affected plants/pots to the far end of the drainage of my property, and placed them on pavement. I have ordered the most nematode-toxic marigolds offered at Lee "guardian" to plant around the area the pots had been sitting. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
i think RKN is the only thing i'm really worried about when it comes to figs. |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
Yeah, once an in-ground is infected, the soil is contaminated, I think your done for. . . |
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brackishfigger
Registered: Posts: 270 |
Just an update on those air layers. All died, getting the bark eaten away by something claiming many of my cuttings, too. All future pots/soil get microwaved prior to use with cuttings!! |
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Grasa
Registered: Posts: 1,819 |
http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/load/pests/msg1222134928674.html this is from another garden site, but on point. |
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Rob
Registered: Posts: 550 |
That's what all cuttings look like when they die. What I mean to say is, I don't think it's a critter that munches the bark, which then kills the cutting. The cutting dies, for some reason. Usually some form of rot starts to affect the part in the soil. Many roots may die, bark will soften and decay. Once enough roots die, or the bark decays enough, the cutting can no longer support the water needs of the leaf. So the leaf droops and falls off. By this time the damage is irreversible. If I had to guess a culprit, I'd say too much moisture in the soil. But even in good conditions some cuttings/airlayers will die. |
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GRamaley
Registered: Posts: 791 |
I've been reading up on soil bacteria and fungus and there are types that go after those nematodes, it will look it up again and get back to you... |
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pino
Registered: Posts: 2,117 |
Are the nematodes on grape roots the same nematodes? |
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WillsC
Registered: Posts: 1,698 |
There are a BUNCH of different kinds of root nematodes. Even on fruit trees if you get a nematode resistant root stock that root will not be resistant to all the RKN just the more common ones. If you happen to live in an area with the more aggressive RKN types......well you have my sympathies. |
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pino
Registered: Posts: 2,117 |
Thanks Wills. |
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fignutty
Registered: Posts: 580 |
RKN can infect many plants; vegetables, fruits, and more. |
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sergio
Registered: Posts: 115 |
Hello everyone, I have experimented with RKN, and with the help of the good doctor from this forum, |
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