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Blumenacker
1 year ago

Hello Cneyt6767

A basic rule in plant construction is:
If young leaves show deformations or deficiency symptoms, the plant has a lack of trace nutrients.
Trace nutrients are: boron, zinc, copper, molybdenum, manganese, iron.

These trace nutrients are no less important than main nutrients, but they can only be absorbed by plants in small amounts.

These small amounts can then not be moved within the plant from the old leaves to new leaves if they lack new leaves due to lack of nutrients.

(This goes with main nutrients. Main nutrients – these are nitrogen, calcium, potassium, phosphorus, magnesium, sulfur – can send the plant, because there is a lot of quantity available, from the old leaves to the new ones if they are missing there. Then they are missing in the old leaves. This is why a lack of main nutrients is always recognized first on the old leaves).

There are certainly some homepage in the web that assigns deficiency symptoms to a certain nutrient deficiency. I’ve got some books for this, and I’m sorry – too tired of counting here all the odds.
Sometimes the pH of the substrate is also the problem when nutrients present in the substrate are poorly available.

In short and close: a little rejuvenation with universal fertilizer could help the problem.

Ceylon123
1 year ago

I do not see a hanging sheet (if any not recognizable in this picture)

New leaves in growth always look different, even the color is usually brighter.

If you have the plant for longer, you know how much it needs water.

With dryness it would be possible that the new sheet hangs first, the older ones are more stable.

On your picture, everything looks normal and healthy. The new leaf becomes even stronger and darker, in no later than 1-2 weeks it looks magnificent, just a little patience.

A moontera isn’t gonna break up either, except overwater.

Maximilian112
1 year ago

The leaf rolls and turns towards the light. I can’t see anything wrong.

Ceylon123
1 year ago
Reply to  Cneyt6767

No, that’s normal.