First, I must apologize for the quality of the photo. I had to hold my camera over the eyepiece of the microscope.
I had been having some problems with older leaves looking withered on some of my paphs. I could see nothing with a hand lens, so I used my 40x wide field microscope. There were a bunch of these microscopic red mites. I wiped with a white cloth and it showed nothing. I have been through a couple of spray cycles and believe they will soon be under control. I monitor for the eggs to hatch and then I spray all of the plants with miticide. They don't seem to like the phals or phrags that are immediately adjacent. The epicenter of the infestation seems to be a hangianum from Hengduan, but there is really no way to know the original source.
The photo shows the shell of a dead individual with 2 eggs inside. The eggs are slightly larger than individual plant cells.
Mike
I had been having some problems with older leaves looking withered on some of my paphs. I could see nothing with a hand lens, so I used my 40x wide field microscope. There were a bunch of these microscopic red mites. I wiped with a white cloth and it showed nothing. I have been through a couple of spray cycles and believe they will soon be under control. I monitor for the eggs to hatch and then I spray all of the plants with miticide. They don't seem to like the phals or phrags that are immediately adjacent. The epicenter of the infestation seems to be a hangianum from Hengduan, but there is really no way to know the original source.
The photo shows the shell of a dead individual with 2 eggs inside. The eggs are slightly larger than individual plant cells.
Mike