The development of brown leaves on a prized plant can be a worrying discovery. However, it doesn't neccessarily mean that you will lose the plant. Often brown leaves are caused by environmental factors, which can be remedied by paying close attention to watering, drainage and shelter.
Plants can be harmed by many problems, including feeding damage from invertebrates or mammals, attack by diseases, and issues caused by adverse environmental factors. However, they can only respond in a limited number of ways, and developing brown leaves is the most common. As a result, figuring out what has caused leaf browning is an essential first step in protecting your plants.
Leaves can turn brown in three ways:
These are causes for browning across part of the leaf, and the controls.
Cause Brown tips or margins often indicate drought in spring or summer. Young growth is particularly susceptible. It may also indicate establishment failure. This is particularly common where dry weather follows spring planting, prior to new roots developing into the surrounding soil.
The damage is often worse where exposure to wind dries out the leaves. The damage is usually worse on the windward side of the plant. In coastal areas, salt-laden winds can also be especially harmful, but this is due to the effect of the salt as well as drying.
Control
Cause The blackening of leaves, usually starting along the vein, is due to water-logging. This is common after wet winters on heavy soils and is frequently seen on Aucuba (spotted laurel) as a problem known as aucuba blackening. The roots, when examined, are a bluish-black and fall apart when teased apart. On larger roots the outer sheath may pull away easily, leaving the inner core. There is often a sour smell to both the soil and roots.
Similar leaf symptoms can sometimes be caused by certain foliar diseases, including the notifiable pathogen Phytophthora ramorum.
These are causes for browning across the entire leaf, with remedial measures.
Cause Brown desiccated lower leaves are common on climbers and this is due to dryness at the roots.
Cause Some leaves go brown from natural causes – evergreen leaves, for example, are long-lived, but are replaced every few years. This often occurs in summer and can be alarming. However, natural replacement is usually confined to lower and older leaves, and those within the foliage or canopy.
Whole brown leaves can also be seen after infection with diseases such as powdery mildew.
These are causes for the browning of whole shoots or plants, and the controls.
Cause Browning of shoots suggests that something is preventing moisture reaching the affected leaves. Tracing the shoot back to the trunk can sometimes reveal cankers or other damage.
Progressive wilting and browning of shoots can be caused by many diseases, including blossom wilt, apple canker, bacterial canker, coral spot, fireblight or verticillium wilt.
Girdling bark damage to shoots or branches from the activities of grey squirrels can also lead to dieback. Some trees, such as sycamore, are affected more commonly than others.
Cause When whole plants go brown, the cause is usually in the roots or trunk. This is frequently due to poor planting and aftercare; lawnmower or strimmer damage; girdling bark damage on the main stem from the activities of rabbits, grey squirrels, deer or voles; waterlogging; or root disease, most commonly honey fungus or Phytophthora root rot. Root diseases can often be detected by examining the collar (where the trunk goes into the ground) and some of the main roots, checking beneath the bark.
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Why has my tree or shrub died?
Trees and shrubs: establishment problems
Leaf damage on woody plants
Trees and shrubs: planting
Non-flowering woody plants
Waterlogging and flooding
Weather damage
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