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Healthy Hydroponics

@HealthyHydrop

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We provide hydroponic microbiome identification and plant pathogen detection and monitoring to ensure healthy crops + food safety. We are part of @MetagenomBio.

Joined July 2020
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
2 months
More targets, better identification!. We are expanding our services to target:.🟢 Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV).🟢 Grapevine Red Blotch Virus (GRBV).🟢 Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV) . Image by Jeffrey W. Lotz, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
2 months
OMAFA Research in Action Webinar on June 12th. Featuring Dr. Trevor Charles (University of Waterloo) with Healthy Hydroponics and Earth Microbial, and Dr. Keith Warriner (University of Guelph) with Clean Works. DM us if you want an invitation code 👈
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
2 months
Our co-founder, Trevor Charles, will be co-presenting at the OMAFRA Research In-Action Webinar alongside Dr. Keith Warriner from the University of Guelph and Clean Works. Save the date (June 12, 2025, 1:30–3:00 PM EDT)
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
2 months
Gray mold symptoms on strawberry (Botrytis Resistance a Growing Challenge in Strawberries - Growing Produce)
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
Dr. Mariangela Hungria received the 2025 World Food Prize for her research in biological nitrogen fixation. Her work over the past 40 years has focused on developing microbial inoculants, which played a vital role in Brazil's transformation into a global agricultural leader. 🌱
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
Did you know the 2024 greenhouse pepper season in Ontario ended early (October–November) because of Fusarium disease pressure? We summarized what is happening into a yearly timeline to track how this threat has progressed—and how research and management efforts have ramped up.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
“During high humidity, white cottony growth may be visible on the underside of the leaf, where sporangia form. Spots are visible on both sides of the leaves.”. — Tomato Late Blight, NC State Extension
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
What if a root disease could predictably follow your plant’s growth rhythm, rising and falling like clockwork? A 2000 study by @AAFC showed that root growth, slimy root secretions, and early symptoms of root rot all surged together, right around 3–5 weeks after transplanting.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
💧 “Subjecting plants to a mist chamber environment where relative humidity was greater than 95% for 24 h significantly increased final powdery mildew disease severity in the pepper cultivars.”
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
3 months
Yes, it is true that powdery mildew can remain hidden (asymptomatic) for 18–21 days on certain host plants. 🔎 . For powdery mildew affecting nightshades (such as eggplant, tomato, and pepper), the disease cycle includes an incubation period of 18–21 days.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
🦠 A 2025 study in BMC Plant Biology shows that while reused peat supports sustainability, it can also lead to fungal pathogen buildup over time unless carefully managed. Manage it right! Here’s where you can start:
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
💡 Peat moss, can help reduce transplant shock by providing a stable and moist environment for roots, minimizing disturbance during transplanting, and promoting healthy root development. 👉 Want to see how to track all of these in your system
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
RT @AgScapeON: In March, we hosted a thinkAG Career Competition at Cornwall Collegiate and Vocational School in Cornwall, Ontario. This tw….
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
TLDR; Scientists found that water in tomato greenhouses is full of tiny microbes, and the way the water is stored or filtered changes which good or bad microbes are in it! 🧪🍅💧.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
On the list to read this weekend. 👉Water Microbiota in Greenhouses With Soilless Cultures of Tomato by Metabarcoding and Culture-Dependent Approaches.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
💐 Peat is a common ingredient in African violet potting mixes, providing excellent moisture retention and aeration. Peat's unique properties require thoughtful water management, as water retention doesn't work when dry.
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@HealthyHydrop
Healthy Hydroponics
4 months
RT @FVGC_PFLC: Every policy decision affects food. From trade to climate to labour, we need a food lens on national policy. That’s what we….
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