Ich habe sie einfach in verdünntes Wasserstoffperoxid getaucht und unter Quarantäne gestellt. Das Cebu-Blau ist das einzige, das leichte optische Schäden aufweist. Das Neon hat einen einzigen silbernen Fleck auf der Unterseite. Der Scindapsus pictus scheint in Ordnung zu sein. Meinungen? Kann mir auch jemand den vollständigen Namen des Scindapsus nennen?

Von: feevart

7 Comments

  1. Icy-Entrepreneur480 on

    Im no expert but the one on the right looks like my silver/satin pothos

  2. SphagnumWitch on

    I would throw these away asap. It’s not worth it to risk your entire collection for a couple cuttings of pretty common plants. Thrips lay their eggs inside the leaves, so dunking them in hydrogen peroxide won’t do anything for any potential eggs, and an entire infestation can start from one singular egg

  3. You know I feel a tiny bit ripped of. I payed him 5€ for them and AFTERWARDS he told me about the thrips… but it’s not that bad. He was a nice guy and I got them for cheap. I will manage

    Edit:
    I also kinda feel for him, he has a absolutely insane music studio / plant room. There where so may plants, like 250 or more. Everything was full of them

  4. I’d toss them. I had a beautiful anthurium that gave my whole cabinet thrips (after quarantine). It’s just not worth it.

  5. Mayflame15 on

    Most thrips pupate in the soil, if you leave these guys imprisoned for 30-45 days any adults you didn’t manage to remove should die and any eggs they lay will hatch and drown in the water

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