What is this? :(

zappaa

Well-Known Member
Hi!
My plants are outdoors. Almost starting flowering.
What are those yellowish spots?

(white stuff is just an anti fungus i sprayed yesterday, in case those spots are some kind of fungus)
 

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Ozumoz66

Well-Known Member
It may be septoria - hope not! It starts at the bottom and works it's way up - eventually taking over every leaf. It's in my soil and I have used landscape fabric to keep rain from splashing the leaves. Also considering container plants. It's happening all over and has people looking for septoria resistant strains.
 

zappaa

Well-Known Member
It may be septoria - hope not! It starts at the bottom and works it's way up - eventually taking over every leaf. It's in my soil and I have used landscape fabric to keep rain from splashing the leaves. Also considering container plants. It's happening all over and has people looking for septoria resistant strains.
Well, this are top of the plant leaves... lower leaves dont have spots.
It looks like septoria :(
Good news is that only a few leaves got spots. What can i do?
 

Ozumoz66

Well-Known Member
Well, this are top of the plant leaves... lower leaves dont have spots.
It looks like septoria :(
Good news is that only a few leaves got spots. What can i do?
Insects may have brought it to your plants. You could remove the infected leaves if there aren't too many. Practice good hygiene before touching another plant. Allow lots of air flow around each plant. You've already been using a fungicide as a preventative, so perhaps keep doing that - if possible use more than one type of fungicide.
 

mandocat

Well-Known Member
Different strains will react differently to septoria. Some may be devastated and others will get a few spots but you will be able to finish the plants. No way to know until you complete the grow. I've dealt with septoria for 6 years, no know cure once you have it, but I have still managed to harvest plenty of quality outdoor despite that. That said, I can't definitively say that is septoria from just those pics.
 

Ozumoz66

Well-Known Member
Perhaps one of the residual detriments of legalization is that many growers are pollen chucking to make different strains and save money. If either plant (donor/receiver) has septoria, then those seeds too will produce plants with septoria - further perpetuating the problem.
 

Farmer's Hat

Well-Known Member
Perhaps one of the residual detriments of legalization is that many growers are pollen chucking to make different strains and save money. If either plant (donor/receiver) has septoria, then those seeds too will produce plants with septoria - further perpetuating the problem.
I didn't know that septoria can be passed on to seeds. Lucky for me, I haven't encountered septoria.
 

thumper60

Well-Known Member
Well, this are top of the plant leaves... lower leaves dont have spots.
It looks like septoria :(
Good news is that only a few leaves got spots. What can i do?
If your in veg I would use some sulfur or copper the only thing i have seen work after outdoor growing 40 plus yrs, In flower god help ya thing with any fungus it needs to be caught early an dealt with strongly hope you are in veg mode.
 

thumper60

Well-Known Member
Perhaps one of the residual detriments of legalization is that many growers are pollen chucking to make different strains and save money. If either plant (donor/receiver) has septoria, then those seeds too will produce plants with septoria - further perpetuating the problem.
No theres no facts to support that. septoria is a seasonal fungus that grows an spreads across the world on many plants. The best a outdoor grower can do is have a solid IPM to nip this shit in the bud as they say! I used to get killed with it here in maine but over the years have learn to nip it in the bud an never see it on a flowering plant.
 

Farmer's Hat

Well-Known Member
No it cant its a outdoor plant problem spread by spores floating in the air. never seen a case indoor.
I haven't looked into it. It does seem a bit farfetched, to imagine that fungus being passed on to the seed embryo.

I have seen pm passed on to seeds. Ive also read that a hydrogen peroxide soak kills all the spores that would otherwise enter the seedlings system once it sprouts.
 
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