Might be hard to see on camera but there's a distinctive band where the stem is brown and suddenly about half a millimeter thinner than the rest. Also it has since flopped over since I took the photo.Does not look affected by fungus.
Thanks, that's what I was afraid of. I did have a couple tomato plants survive a few years ago but they were still sickly and hardly produced any fruit. I think the fungus was living in some old peat pods which I had laying around and used.If it is damping off that's a fungal infection. Without treatment it will spread rapidly. I have not known any to survive without proper treatment and usually the treatment does not save affected seedlings, just prevents it infecting others. It is probably already too late to save this one if it has now collapsed.
OK, let me rephrase: It looks like it is in a dark spot and lacks sunlight, yes. It looks like the root is above the soil, yes (The brown part is root, not stem). It does not look like fungal infection.Might be hard to see on camera but there's a distinctive band where the stem is brown and suddenly about half a millimeter thinner than the rest. Also it has since flopped over since I took the photo.
I thought of this which is why I specifically transplanted it deeper than it was. The margin moved upwards. Unfortunately I can't take any risks because I have other seeds that I need to start soon which I'm really counting on.OK, let me rephrase: It looks like it is in a dark spot and lacks sunlight, yes. It looks like the root is above the soil, yes (The brown part is root, not stem). It does not look like fungal infection.
Yeah, it was in a peat pod initially and I just put the whole pod in the container cell and added more loose peat on top. I use peat pods to avoid transplant stress but the pods I have might be too small for actual trees which may be why it pushed out.It is likely that the root was just exposed below the soil level and when you messed with it that stessed it even more. Next time just add a little soil over the exposed root area without disturbing the roots themselves.