Quote:
Originally Posted by Shadeflower
they could also be bark lice but bark lice generally don't jump, hang out on roots - not the plant and feed off algae.
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This is of particular interest to me. I become concerned (probably like others) when I see small critters crawling around the bark and the roots of my potted orchids.
My concern: what the "heck" is that! More importantly ~ these guys aren't supposed to be here.
Worse: my front burner starts to fire constantly, wondering if they're going to damage my plants.
I've had to figure out what those critters were, and why they unexpectedly showed up in my orchid pots (especially my pots that use 100% bark as a medium). Was able to figure out some those pests fairly easy; fungus gnats and bush snails. Was also able to rectify those problems so they would not snowball out of control if I didn't act on finding a solution.
Was not able to figure out the bark lice until a friend came over (much more knowledgeable than me about orchid pests). He was able to nail down an ID for me: bark lice (psocids -Psocoptera:
Embidopsocus enderleini).
He filled me in as to the "why" they were probably there, and more-or-less explained what these small bugs do. I remember most of the information he gave me: loving high humidity and damp bark, crawling throughout the bark and over orchid roots, munching/eating bacteria and fungus, along with making bark decompose much quicker than normal.
I keep all of my orchids within terrariums now-a-days (in a controlled environment). I know my growing conditions are favorable for bark lice. Very seldom is anything ever added within my established/existing set-ups. A question that still nags at me today... where in the "Hades" do these critters come from to start with? I thought that repotting my orchids in new & fresh bark would eliminate them. But, they have reappeared on occasion (even after using fresh/good quality bark acquired from different sources, and repotting on a somewhat frequent schedule). Still haven't figured this one out... maybe somehow they already exist in my fresh replacement bark.