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For disease/problem diagnosis:
Provide a sample showing both diseased and healthy tissue on the same sample. For proper diagnosis, samples should have stems or branches 6" long or longer. Individual leaves are usually not sufficient. Include a small handful of fine feeder roots if you think the plant can spare them.
For plant identification:
Provide as many parts of the plant as possible - the entire plant if it is small enough. In addition to stems and leaves, include flowers or berries if available. Attach a description of the plant's size, shape and growing habits. (For example, does it drop its leaves in winter, is it a 5' shrub or a 1' groundcover, etc. If no flowers are available, describe when it last flowered and what kind of flowers it had.)
Sod:
Submit a sample of sod 6" to 8" square from the margin of the affected area that contains both healthy and problem grass. Do not send grass that is already dead.. Send the entire root system - it may be 2 or 3 inches deep. Place sod it a plastic bag inside a sturdy box. For identification of a lawn weed, do not send sod but follow instructions above for plant identification.
Insects:
Collect one or more complete insect specimens and place them in a sturdy plastic container (such as old pill bottle or film cannister) with diluted rubbing alcohol. Soak insects overnight to preserve them, then drain off ALL the alcohol and seal. Do this BEFORE you bring the sample to the library. Do not send insects in tissue paper or envelopes. Do not tape insects to a card or paper. . |