possible answer to your question, without seeing the tomato, could be stink bug's ... if the fruit is ripe with yellow spots and when you cut into it where the yellow spots are just as ripe or spongy... kinda white like...most likely stink bugs. try some kind of fruit friendly pesticides. that should help.
If you plant your new plants outside and the leaves turn white, it might be that they're not used to the direct sunlight, and are getting sun-scorched. Hopefully some more leaves will grow to replace them!
* They got too hot and shrivelled and died * They had water on them and the sun caught them which burnt them * Overwatering * They have a disease
Leaf miners. Remove infected leaves and discard.
Tomatoes start out green and as they ripen a chemical process causes them to change colour. Some turn red, others orange, or white, or yellow or even purple. The leaves of the tomato plant are green because of the chlorophyll present in them.
Are you sure it is an insect. It could be mildew.
Mildew can cause a white film on peonies.
yes because if the plants have no pigment ,they will became white.
== Some hardwood trees drop sap from their leaves. This acts as a herbicide for smaller plants growing in their shade. An oak, at full maturity can drop 50, 000 gallons of this fluid in a years time and cause white spots on plants like squash, zuchinni, tomatos and other plants.
There are several types of clover plants with tiny leaves. Some species of clover with small leaves include the Dutch white clover, sweet clover, and common white clover.
because cabbage is the only thing they can eat
Powdery mildew is the disease which causes powder-white dust to appear on leaves and lower leaves and stems to turn grey. The disease in question reflects the work of fungi within the Erysiphales order. Its control and prevention generally require concerted efforts with fungicides, resistant varieties, sanitation, and ventilation.
you are describing two different problems, the swirly white trails look lke something small is "cutting a new path" inside the leave, right? it is a small moth larvae eating the leaves. they dont do too much damage and dealing with them involves strong poisons so i recommend to just leave them be. as for the new growth, it sounds like it is nitrogen deficient, i'd recomend a dose of 20-20-20 fertilizer with added micronutrients. best of luck
No he does not like to be called the flying tomato.
A yucca is any of several evergreen plants of the genus Yucca, with rigid leaves at the top of a woody stem, and showy white blossoms.