<h1>The potted plant was not sick, but the leaves were yellow and broken, and one leaf was rolled up and opened to understand</h1>
Many flower lovers will encounter such a situation, and there will always be some conditions in the plants with leaves at home. It's like being bitten by a bug, with a hole in the middle. And there is also the phenomenon of yellowing and blackening. What's going on here? Is it the self-destruction of the potted plants or the wanton rampage of insects? Welcome to the path of exploration after the emergence of today's leaves.

We often see plant leaves being "bitten" into a sieve by something in the wild, and potted green plants at home, and the leaves often become incomplete.
Just like the leaves of this green plant, it has become unbearable, because the plant that occurs in this situation is not only one, so the problem of the plant itself can be ruled out, so let's see what kind of bugs are so excessive? In fact, if there is such a situation in the leaves in the home, then we can directly determine that it is an insect called the leaf curl moth that is tricking the ghost.
Leaf curlers belong to the family Mothidae. Species belonging to this family are essentially economically harmful pests. As one of them, the leaf curling moth is also "not dishonored by the mission, it is very good". Below is the legendary leaf curling moth.
The leaf curl moth is very "capable" from the beginning of the larvae, specially selecting fresh young leaves, flower buds, and new shoots to eat. So if the plant is contaminated with leaf curl moths at this time, then it is simply whimsical to blossom and bear fruit, and the destructive power of leaf curl moths is very powerful. And the leaf curl moth is very fond of plants such as large-leaved boxwood, peach, clover, etc., if we have such plants at home, then we should pay more attention. The "age" of leaf curl moths can be analyzed by observing leaf damage. Basically, when the leaves are curled leaves and withered and yellowed with membrane spots, it means that the leaf curl moth is a hatching larvae, and if the leaves already have holes and holes, then it is certain that this is done by older larvae. Whether they are hatching larvae or older larvae, they belong to the larval stage.
Leaf curl moths generally dormant during the day and move at night. Flower lovers should try to avoid or prevent the leaf curling moths from being brought into the home during the mature period of adult insects, so that they do not lay their eggs into the plant.
And if we find that the plants in the home have rolled leaves, then we must deal with them in time to avoid causing more serious damage. We can spray high-efficiency cyfcfluthrin or methylphenidate on the leaves during the larval incubation phase. The best option for spraying drugs is when the larvae are active, that is, at night or in the evening.
If florists scratch their heads at the drugs mentioned above, then you can consider an easier way. It is "sweet and sour insecticide". It was totally something we needed to use at home. The raw materials used only need sugar, wine, water, and are mixed in a ratio of 1:1:16 and put into the bottle and hung near the pot. Although the leaf curl moth is vegetarian, it has a rather persistent love for sweet and sour. So this "bait" is simply "sweet arsenic" for leaf curl moths.
If the potted plants at home appear again in the case of leaf curls, then the flower friends should be very calm to deal with, of course, the treatment is not as good as the prevention of disease, or more observation, more prevention, so as to avoid plant problems.