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Dark spots on Lipstick Palm petioles


David_Sweden

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My Lipstick Palm has beautifully red petioles since over a year (after a long wait) and when I saw big clusters of dark brown spots on these, I first thought it was nothing (just some pigmentation):
Upl2.thumb.JPG.09f5272171876cad0c480ff52
But when I checked it with a loupe it turned out a bit more suspicious. My plant book suggests it could be either scale insects or what I think you in English call just "edema" or "oedema", because small wounds have formed which when healing cause corky stuff (in my country it is called "cork disease"), and that the edema can be caused either by bugs (e g different kinds of mites or thrips) or physiologically. I've been trying to identify what it is and I wonder if anyone with experience of these diseases or this palm can say what you think.

The spots you see are from 0.2x0.2 to 0,3x2 mm but they are also on the petiole to the right and of those a few are 0.5x1 and 2x2 mm, several are ~1x1mm and most are smaller. Mostly placed just above where the thinner part of the petiole starts but a few higher up too, and if oblong then always in the direction of the veins. The brown stuff in itself is flat, sometimes it feels like it is slightly recessed but just as often it feels completely flat and many of the ones to the right are elevated, or maybe rather flat corky stuff on top of elevated tissue. If I scratch with a wooden stick I can often peel the elevated ones off but not the sunken ones, and underneath it is red or beige so there is no damage under the whole spot but maybe a small crack, it is hard to see for sure.

I'm thinking it is probably not mites or thrips since the leaves are perfectly green, and it should grow slow but grows very well, and also younger parts should be affected too. Also can't see any bugs (though I know mites can be down to 0.2mm and thrips can hide). Thrips should also cause pale lines (on undersides of leaves) and black poop stains less than 1mm big.

And there is no sticky stuff (honeydew) that I can see and the spots are sometimes "merged" and really look more like part of the plant tissue than a shield and not at all uniform so I think it is probably not scale insects.

So I'm thinking it is most likely physiological. Being only on older parts and the different shapes fits the symptoms. I read that it should then also be on the underside of leaves but I don't know if that is always true. These edema are caused by water pressure being too high inside the plant, which can be caused by a combination of much water in soil, high humidity and low light (and too much fertilizer for slow-growing plants).

I have a humidifier which automatically switches on at 41%RH and off at maybe 50%RH but it has rarely been active since summer (maybe 1% of the time) and the vapor has been directed away from the stem (but may well hit some leaves). I use ceramic metal halide spots at the ceiling which give most parts of most leaves 1.5 to 3klx (plus that it is next to a window but it is winter now so not much sun). Fertilizer is liquid at every watering and at half the recommended dose for all my palms and it grows a lot. I leached it on the 30th of Dec which was a bit later than I planned (previous leaching was 5 months earlier). I check soil moisture level before watering and it normally varies from 10-11 when newly watered down to mostly around 4-5 when time to water it (but a bit uneven, maybe 3-6).

But there is one thing I think might be a cause for very local high soil moisture level: I have tried out self-watering the last 5 months, which entails 2 wicks at opposite sides and 2 jars of fertilized water under it. I've tested a number of wicking materials and these are very efficient compared to all others I tried and able to supply several times more water than it consumes but still don't manage to keep the whole pot moist enough (which I assume must be due to too poor pull within pot) so I still have to water it about every 3 days. It is a bit rootbound but not much, I can poke the moisture meter almost anywhere without almost any resistance.

So I'm hoping terminating the self-watering experiment will do the trick but I'm still a bit worried. What do you think?

This is the root ball Nov 25th:
Upl3.thumb.jpg.d942941b1173328fdc562a24f

This is the whole thing:

Upl1.thumb.jpg.65d5d2f860f11a2381e9e7361

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Nothing to worry about. Probably related to this palm not being a good long-term subject for indoor cultivation. Yours looks fine for now. I would not expect too much from it...this is a full blown lowland TRF palm and will suddenly not like its conditions in a major way sometime down the road.

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Well so far it's been growing like crazy, all green and seems to have penetrated the soil very well since water drains at a rate of about 10s/cm if saturated, and roots only peek out the bottom 2 mm then decide not to go there. I counted 15 stems in October and there are even more now. Should maybe abandon the strategy of narrow pots and in this case get a wider pot. It's been here for over 2½ years. This comparison pic is from Nov 5th:
5a6d978e8b80d_LipstickGrowth2years.thumb

The list of possible reasons for dots above I got from a book which had a more extensive and detailed list than any internet source I could find, but since yesterday I thought of 2 possible causes for physiologically caused edema:

One is dusting. I admit I don't believe dusting has such a big impact as many seem to think and it is well protected from outside dust most of the time and I can't imagine things like pieces of cloth or hair to cause problems, but I can imagine smaller and stickier particles to matter, like small pieces of human skin and whatnot. I found this article which says fine-particle dust can clog stomata so that they remain open if they were open when dust came but it can't really clog them to stay shut. But then I found this article which says dust can clog stomata so that they get plugged (but only if open when dust comes). So I will dust them carefully with a wet soft cloth (tricky to avoid removing wax while still getting in contact with the whole corrugated surface). There are examples of big leaves which haven't been dusted in 2½ years which are perfectly green so I don't expect this to be a major cause but can imagine it can contribute.

The other one I just thought of is low humidity. My book warns for the situation well known from greenhouses that if plants have high humidity and wet soil they may not be able to push the water out through the stomata which causes edema. But I'm thinking of the opposite: An associate professor (focused on soil, and not interested in palms much, but still) told me plants in general close their stomata if humidity is <40%RH. The obvious reason to keep humidity up is that leaves might dry out but another one is that with stomata closed there is no photosynthesis and the plant (or at least the leaf) will slowly die (takes months). I have the humidity strategy of boiling water every morning to reach 60% (just before that I aerate properly) and let this slowly decline so that I have >50% for seberal hours, and also I have 2 humidifiers with hygrostats which in one room regulates between 45 and 50% but in this room 40 to ~50%. I have bought a better hygrostat and I think properly placed I can make it regulate to 45-50%.

Stomata is an area in need of much research. I mean sure there have been some research (I skipped through a book titled Stomata by Willmer & Fricker full of such research) but still they don't even know if plants actually care about the parameter we call relative humidity, another theory is that they sense "water vapour saturation deficit". The book teaches interesting stuff like that almost all trees have stomata only on the back side of the leaves, placement and pattern of stomata differs between species, some can adapt their stomata in several ways (like oil palms), and a couple of other sources say that e g Coconut palms close their stomata if <60%RH and e g alocasias can't close their stomata at all. And it is hard to find useful detailed info. If I compare to light illumination requirements I have been able to find lists of light preferences for a great number of palms and other plants (even in the unit lux), but regarding stomata and the connected humidity needs I have never seen any such list just occasional rare examples like the ones I mentioned. I'm sure it is because professional growers have this covered by having massive humidifiers so it's only a problem for the end customers like me and you but we are not worth the research it is better if the plants die so that we buy more..

I'm also thinking it should probably be ok if I peel the dots off if they are easy to peel with e g a wooden stick? I think it's similar to "scab crust" on a human.

Edited by David_Sweden
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Very interesting! David, you say the pic of the smaller plant is from November 5th? Is that Nov. 5th of 2017?!

Naples (inland), FL - technically 10a but more like 9b in the winter :hmm:

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3 hours ago, David_Sweden said:

Hi. It is growth over 2 years with little pic from 151107 and big pic from 171105

OH! Sorry, you did mention that lol Great growing!!

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Naples (inland), FL - technically 10a but more like 9b in the winter :hmm:

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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

Thanks Scott, that's a big relief to hear. And the spots haven't become worse since January.

Missi, the pot in the "151107" pic has the same shape as the one I potted up to so I realize it might look like the same pot with different magnifications but the pics are to scale, the pots are different sizes. Until now I have followed the advice to have narrow pots since it is suitable for the way palm's (and roses) roots grow, but with the Lipstick I just decided a week ago to repot to something just 1,5cm taller but ~4cm wider in diameter, since there are so many stems and a big middle stem making the whole plant rather wide (and I think the root system is wide as well since I can see roots growing from the sides of the big stem and then often not just down but outwards on the surface first). It is behaving very nicely rootwise by never attempting to peek much out the bottom and really filling the soil with both big & small roots:

180402(12)c.thumb.jpg.139b5234dc48ef34a1

I had to water every 3 days though plus I got nervous by some unevenness of moisture and almost instantly reaching low moisture levels which I think was due to abundance of roots quickly sucking soil dry and adding to percentage of non-peat. Now that I have ~2cm soil all around the whole root ball remains moist considerably longer.

There's a new frond unfolding right now from the biggest stem:

180408b.thumb.JPG.c9fdb29e7b47072016d8c9

It kept on growing after repotting, but then I only added soil around the old root ball (but 40% seramis instead of the 30% sand before). This is one of few plants I still keep in a peat mix. It seems to have no problem with it, it drains really quickly, I think maybe the roots are good at penetrating and at filling the soil volume creating a texture so that it makes its own aeration passages. Maybe next year I feel I should replace the soil mix and if so probably use one with intrinsically better drainage. Makes me quite nervous though, I heard how it hates dry roots, I misted the root ball every minute it was out in the air.

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  • 2 months later...

Does anyone know what this is supposed to become?

5b24f43514a7b_180616(17)rs.jpg.4b3e9e3f2  5b24f4518df09_180616(17).thumb.JPG.21383

It has about 16 small stems already (besides the main stem) but they so far have always started out green and pointing upwards, and new roots come now and then but they tend to go rather straight downwards. But this? It even looks "telescopic" with something emerging in the middle. Is it a way to spread in a weed-like fashion to take over a whole garden? Is it hoping to find a new pot? Or trying to get feet and run away?

I could put a collage of odd shaped leaves & fronds here, like with very big leaves but then only 2 of them, and the 3rd biggest frond having very slim leaves, and some concave instead of convex one side. It's becoming big. Will give it a 50% bigger pot this summer because requires watering every 2-3 days now and it got a 50% bigger pot just 2½ months ago (just adding soil around the root ball so far so not much stress, although I fear I will have to exchange soil some day). This is the whole thing right now:

180616i.thumb.JPG.4fea301e6521c77d11a4e6

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"The thing" has been growing slowly but steadily. Here's a 1½ month old pic of it:

180429-3-csc.jpg.62f0c0b21f6d69dd89b887a

Maybe the world's biggest aerial root? Or trying to become more human and reaching out to shake my hand? :)

I thought "clustering" (with "suckers") meant just a big number of local stems, not aerial ofshoots? I know strawberries do that but palms? And if it is an offshoot why does it go clearly above ground? If I place a pot filled with soil next to it, will I have one more palm growing in the other pot soon? And can I eventually cut the shoot off and have two separate palms? Googling it I find that "Chamaedorea Stolonifera" (the "Stolon Palm") propagates in an invasive way by underground branches called stolons. Sounds like clustering but with a wider range. And mine is clearly above ground. :huh:

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David, I think that you did the right thing with the bigger pot. 

The people who have a lot of success with smaller pots usually have solitary palms in them. And fuss over them.

I think that your plant that size does need a greater water reserve.

Cheers Steve

It is not dead, it is just senescence.

   

 

 

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My Rh Baueri was in the same pot size until 2 days ago when I potted it up to the double volume (from 11L to 22L which is almost 6 GAL) not only because it needed watering at least every 2 days but also because it seemed unable to keep more than about 3 fronds green with the others slowly turning partially pale/yellow then brown and because it seems to have a pretty big root system (there was a mat of roots under the pot even though I'd been careful not to leave water in the tray to avoid accumulation of roots, and was repotted only 7 months ago although in the same pot but changed from peat/sand to coir/seramis, and also started to get surface roots), and I have a view of it as being rather thirsty and probably won't be harmed by a bigger pot. And with the very well drained sifted coir/seramis mix there should be little risk for lack of oxygen. I even kept this in standing water for months last year and it didn't do worse than before so it seems to like water and not be very sensitive to if there's a bit much of it:

180616-3c.jpg.7832e1365e5ab34acd01ab8cf6

Unlike my Licuala Ramsayi which also is in the same 11L pot but where I have problems that could be mainly because pot is too big, although not really too big because there are roots throughout and it would require very frequent watering if smaller pot, but I think most likely roots are sparse and from what I read in this forum it would probably have preferred a smaller pot (it would prefer to be outdoors in the ground in a different country but if it gets to choose between big & small pot..). You can see half of it above. I'm giving it some special treatment right now, hope it responds.

But the Lipstick doesn't seem to mind the present pot size, it never ever had a frond turn yellow except one a month ago but I think it was about time, it does have a lot of fronds considering the size of the pot. I repot mainly because I'd like to water less often and since I feel sure it has filled the pot with roots now (I can tell by using moisture meter). But the Lipstick has been behaving perfectly pot-wise. When the Baueri's roots emerge both under and over the pot and ignore what people call "air pruning" (just keeps growing, soil or air, it grows anyway) and the Ramsayi's roots have no plans to come out of the pot and are having a hard time filling the present pot, the Lipstick has a very clear tendency to grow to the drainage holes then stop there, and some turn and go up the sides a bit, so that in total it uses the soil volume it has in a very efficient way. It has a peat mix which drains very well, I'm sure thanks to the root system having created a net throughout. Most leaves are all green, some leaves are partially pale but seem to stay that way. Ashamed to admit I missed watering by 1 day once last month so that soil became very dry for about a day but it caused no harm. Hope I will never cause dry soil again, but the idea to keep water in the saucer for Lipsticks, altough maybe fine, is not a requirement, it is perfectly happy with normal watering, i e water when slightly moist.

Meanwhile, does nobody have any ideas about "the hand" of whatever it is in the 1st pic from Saturday? If not a hand or foot and not an antennae then what?

180616-17rs-hand.jpg.abecb1d1dc76ff252f2

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  • 1 month later...

"The Hand" is probably a foot.. I mean a root. Has anyone seen or heard of such roots, for the Lipstick or any other palm? It is like a telescopic antenna, adding section by section.

5b68885443faa_180806Antenna.thumb.png.05

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Maybe. But I thought rhizomes were under ground and stolons above ground (and along the surface, not high up like this)? And googling I find only one palm, Chamaedorea stolonifera (the "Stolon palm") with stolons. Other than that the only palm I find with above soil branching is Hyphaene thebaica but that doesn't look like stolons. Some palm trees have rhizomes but I haven't read about Lipsticks having it. 

growthhabits.jpg.94981d7cf743c905382858a

 

Edited by David_Sweden
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Many clustering palms like Rhapis are spreading by rhizomes (underground), others like Cyrtostachys very closely attached to the stem »or more rarely diffusely spreading by stolons.« (Genera Palmarum 1987, p. 378)

My photos at flickr: flickr.com/photos/palmeir/albums

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I have found also these remarks in Hendersons Evolution and Ecology of Palms:

»Some palms produce stolons that elongate horizontally for some distance from the parent stem before becoming orthotropic. These stolons have scale leaves at their nodes. Examples are the elongate stolons of Calamus trachycoleus (…); Iriartella setigera (…), Korthalsia sp. (…), and Pinanga sp. (…).« (Henderson 2002, p. 21)

I would propose that you open a new thread on the other forum with a title like Palms Producing Stolons or so and ask for other photos. :greenthumb:

My photos at flickr: flickr.com/photos/palmeir/albums

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Thanks Pal. It will be interesting to see where it ends up. The way it's pointed right now, it will hit the inside of the pot. I kinda hope it does. Wouldn't know what to do with it if it starts crawling far away.. Except maybe the idea of putting a new, small pot next to it, maybe I would then get one more palm, and could cut the stolon eventually?

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9 minutes ago, David_Sweden said:

Thanks Pal. It will be interesting to see where it ends up. The way it's pointed right now, it will hit the inside of the pot. I kinda hope it does. Wouldn't know what to do with it if it starts crawling far away.. Except maybe the idea of putting a new, small pot next to it, maybe I would then get one more palm, and could cut the stolon eventually?

I would fix a bigger vinyl bag on the tip of the stolon, so that it can grow first roots eventually …

My photos at flickr: flickr.com/photos/palmeir/albums

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  • 2 weeks later...

Thanks but it is headed just inside the brim. Can't see how I can fit a bag there then. But maybe it will start crawling along the brim, maybe I can change its direction a bit then. 

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On 1/31/2018, 1:41:34, Missi said:

OH! Sorry, you did mention that lol Great growing!!

Have a larger one also indoors and it's pretty speedy in it's growth. I keep mind in a larger tub of warm water.

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It is really active in the root area. The main stem has cracked open and from just this angle you can see 4 "somethings" in the planning, don't know if they will become roots or stolons. It seems to take months considering what to do with them:

180817ca.thumb.jpg.02a9b19386e3471b49bec

The rest is growing fast as well. I stopped counting stems at 16 in June and it's added some since then. And now two fronds hit the ceiling. By 3 months I will have to remove the stool to make room for higher fronds which means I have to add one more CMH spot to cover lower leaves..

5b768144eb363_180817(5).thumb.JPG.233087 5b76813f86bb8_180817(2).thumb.JPG.3485b9

I have issues with other palms (like the Coccothrinax seedlings you can see in the window but hopefully they are allright now) but this one grows like crazy. It is not perfect, some yellow pale areas here and there and some small brown tips but nothing that looks bad.

I do worry about the soil for the future, it is mostly peat and so far it loves it and it drains fast (due to roots penetrrating it so well I think) but I'm thinking eventually I might have to exchange soil either due to peat being unsuitable (too wet) when pot gets even bigger or peat getting old and I fear it might hate that plus getting heavy. So far no problems with the soil though and maybe it will keep good texture due to the root system penetrating so well. It's funny how fast it penetrates the soil but without causing soil to become really compact and without circling the bottom or even sticking out. Really easy to get out of the pot unlike other palms which cling to the drainage holes after a few weeks.

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  • 2 months later...

One can't argue with your success. I would give it a much bigger pot. Crytostachys love growing as emergent swamp plants in standing water, so there's no way that you could overwater the plant. If the soil (or soil + water) temperature could be maintained at 26 C or above the palm would be really happy. Admittedly, it looks pretty happy right now!

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It is not perfect (some yellow and even brown areas) but looks quite happy and grows fast. Room normally is 23-24C and this is a bedroom so I can't really increase it more - luckily my girlfriend is from southern Africa and likes slightly higher temps :wub:. Stolon grows very slowly and I am in no hurry to mess with it, will just see where it plans to go for a while.. I don't think it minds the pot size, now that summer is over it requires watering every 5-6 days (in summer every 3½ days or so) and if I poke soil with moisture meter I can feel it is not very compact, and no roots coming out bottom. I know these can be left in standing water but I also concluded (mainly on my Lipstick seedling which I gave away) that they don't mind being watered "normally" i e water when moist not wet (but rather too wet than too dry for this). By now the side stems are so big they are also producing big fronds, two of them have just opened up:

5be6d97b7109b_181106(2)cupl.thumb.jpg.7c

Would look better in a bigger apartment though, or a house, maybe should make some babies so that we get an excuse to move.. :P

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On 11/10/2018, 8:26:27, David_Sweden said:

Would look better in a bigger apartment though, or a house, maybe should make some babies so that we get an excuse to move.. :P

Green babies are a good enough excuse! :greenthumb:

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Naples (inland), FL - technically 10a but more like 9b in the winter :hmm:

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  • 2 weeks later...

@Cancundude, since you mentioned you've been looking around at other posts, I'm sure you've seen this post. Tagging you in case you haven't. Beautifully grown indoors!

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Naples (inland), FL - technically 10a but more like 9b in the winter :hmm:

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  • 2 months later...
  • 1 year later...

I dont have mine anymore but if it looks like "woody" and is in the center of the leaf I think it should be there

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