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Old August 22, 2016   #1
4season
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Default what is wrong with this pepper ?

These are yellow hots but this happens on other hot and bell peppers planted in the same soil and side by side. Sometimes the leaves look like they have iron chlorosis.
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Old August 22, 2016   #2
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I should have said the peppers on affected plants are smaller and shorter than they should be.
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Old August 22, 2016   #3
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To me they just look hungry. Iron chlorosis looks whiter. Give some chelate if you want, it won't make it worse (provided you follow the bottle instructions). I suggest a shot of nitrogen fertilizer too.
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Old August 23, 2016   #4
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I agree with Marianne; that plant is just hungry and needs a boost.
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Old August 23, 2016   #5
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OK, I will go out in the rain (light sprinkle we can use) and side dress a few and put soluble stuff on others. I have seen results from "if some is good more is better" so I am over cautious. Thanks
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Old August 23, 2016   #6
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At this point, with a relatively long season, you might want to consider snipping those branchlets and observing the new growth.
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Old August 23, 2016   #7
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Any dark colored girdling of the stem at the soil line?
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Old August 27, 2016   #8
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No dark colored girdling at the soil line. Had the idea that these plants were where there was a root knot nematode problem a few years back. Dug up one stunted plant, Roots look fine except there were not as many as I expected. OK it an hour later and with the magnifying glass I looked at the roots, no nematode galls noted but the ends of the fine roots looked dead and shrunken. Like going abruptly from a pencil line to fine thread. I will dig another to look at later.

Last edited by 4season; August 27, 2016 at 12:58 PM. Reason: add info
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Old August 27, 2016   #9
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I've been having similar problems, and I'm in pots. Luxury potting mix. Plant doesn't do well, or does well then sort of fades away. Root autopsy shows nothing like RKN. Generally white roots, but there just aren't many of them. At this point I'm at a loss, so I remain interested in what you discover.
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Old August 31, 2016   #10
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I am still looking for the cause. I showed the comparison picture to a person at the nursery and was told genetics or fertilizer needed, I don't think he was correct. The rootlet in the center shows how some rootlets neck down suddenly. Lousy picture but as close as I could get.
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Old August 31, 2016   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4season View Post
I am still looking for the cause. I showed the comparison picture to a person at the nursery and was told genetics or fertilizer needed, I don't think he was correct. The rootlet in the center shows how some rootlets neck down suddenly. Lousy picture but as close as I could get.
I would very highly suspect pythium. The plant looked classic for it, even without the girdling at the soil line.
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Old September 2, 2016   #12
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At one of the New Mexico Organic Conferences I went to they mentioned isothiocyanites for fumigating soils. http://journal.ashspublications.org/...24/5/462.short That link is to a short note on a study about using Brassica species for fumigation(pythium control) because of their iso.... content. Looking at the pepper patches, hot and bell, the affected peppers have an irregular distribution which is consistent with an infectious agent of some sort. I should remember this stuff when I am in the garden.
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