Diagnostics

Woody Ornamentals-Deciduous-Shrub

Barberry (Berberis)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Cucumber mosaic (Cucumber mosaic virus)
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Viruses can retard plant growth and change the appearance of foliage, flowers and fruits. Virus-infected leaves can become spotted, streaked or mottled; they may be distorted or stunted. Veins may lose their color or develop outgrowths. Flowers can be dwarfed, deformed, streaked, faded, or they can remain green and develop into leaf-like structures.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Gray mold (Botrytis blight) (Botrytis cinerea)
    Causes brown, water-soaked spots or decay on leaves or petals. Once diseased tissue encircles the stem, the shoot will wilt. Botrytis is easily diagnosed by the fluffy gray, tan or brown mold produced on blighted plant parts under moist conditions. It rapidly blights flowers. Infected petals that fall onto foliage or stems can cause additional blighting and dieback.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Inchworms (cankerworm, loopers, spanworms) (Geometridae family)
    Inchworms are a collective group of caterpillars including cankerworms, loopers and spanworms. These larvae move distinctively, contracting their bodies into a hump, then extending straight due to only 2-3 sets of prolegs. Colors vary widely depending on species. Female adults are usually wingless and lay egg masses on small twigs, under bark or in trunk crevices. Larvae descend from trees on silk strands when they're ready to pupate, landing on anything in their path.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Powdery mildew (woody plants) (Several)
    The upper and/or (less frequently) lower surface of leaves, as well as stems of infected plants, have a white, powdery appearance. They look as though someone has h pper and/or (less frequently) lower surface of leaves, as well as stems of infected plants, have a white, powdery appearance. They look as though someone has sprinkled them with talcum powder or powdered sugar.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii)
    This disease is only active during hot weather. Plants may grow well in infested soil during most of the growing season and only be damaged during the hottest part of summer. Initial symptoms are yellowing or wilting of lower leaves, then basal stems decay, followed by the collapse of individual stems or entire plants. Inspection of the stem at the soil line reveals white mycelium (fungal strands) and small, tan spherical sclerotia (fungal survival structures) that resemble mustard seeds. Roots are unaffected. Decay of the stem at the soil line is common during hot, humid weather.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Whitefly (Aleyrodidae family)
    Adult whiteflies are small (1-2mm), white, fly-like insects related to scales, aphids and mealybugs. Their color comes from wax they create to cover their bodies. All whitefly stages are usually found on the undersides of leaves. There can be several generations per year depending on the environment.

Blue mist spirea (Caryopteris)

  • Black walnut toxicity (herbaceous) ()
    Plants sensitive to juglone, a toxic substance produced by black walnut trees and to a lesser extent, butternut trees and shagbark hickories, may be stunted, have yellow or brown twisted leaves, may exhibit wilting or some or all of the plant parts, and die over time. Often an affected plant's vascular tissue will be discolored. Symptoms may occur rapidly, even within a few days of being transplanted into a walnut tree's root zone. Some plants may survive for years near a young walnut tree, only to succumb as the tree increases in size.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gray mold (Botrytis blight) (Botrytis cinerea)
    Causes brown, water-soaked spots or decay on leaves or petals. Once diseased tissue encircles the stem, the shoot will wilt. Botrytis is easily diagnosed by the fluffy gray, tan or brown mold produced on blighted plant parts under moist conditions. It rapidly blights flowers. Infected petals that fall onto foliage or stems can cause additional blighting and dieback.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Butterfly bush (Buddleia)

  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Cucumber mosaic (Cucumber mosaic virus)
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Viruses can retard plant growth and change the appearance of foliage, flowers and fruits. Virus-infected leaves can become spotted, streaked or mottled; they may be distorted or stunted. Veins may lose their color or develop outgrowths. Flowers can be dwarfed, deformed, streaked, faded, or they can remain green and develop into leaf-like structures.
  • Earwig (Forficula auricularia)
    Adults are about 1/2" long with prominent pincers on their hind ends, and reddish brown with lighter-colored, short wing covers on the thorax. Earwigs overwinter in the adult stage. Females lay eggs twice in a season, but there is only 1 generation per year. Foraging occurs at night, with movement to dark, sheltered areas during the day.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gray mold (Botrytis blight) (Botrytis cinerea)
    Causes brown, water-soaked spots or decay on leaves or petals. Once diseased tissue encircles the stem, the shoot will wilt. Botrytis is easily diagnosed by the fluffy gray, tan or brown mold produced on blighted plant parts under moist conditions. It rapidly blights flowers. Infected petals that fall onto foliage or stems can cause additional blighting and dieback.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii)
    This disease is only active during hot weather. Plants may grow well in infested soil during most of the growing season and only be damaged during the hottest part of summer. Initial symptoms are yellowing or wilting of lower leaves, then basal stems decay, followed by the collapse of individual stems or entire plants. Inspection of the stem at the soil line reveals white mycelium (fungal strands) and small, tan spherical sclerotia (fungal survival structures) that resemble mustard seeds. Roots are unaffected. Decay of the stem at the soil line is common during hot, humid weather.
  • Thrips (Order Thysanoptera)
    Minute insects usually identifiable only under high-powered magnification. Thrips have a modified, single mandible that they use to puncture plant tissue. They then feed on the sap that exudes from the resulting wound. Larvae drop to the soil to pupate. Adult insects like flowers with an open structures where the stamen and pistil are readily available.
  • Two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae)
    This most common spider mite is miniscule (0.5mm) and prefers to colonize and lay eggs on leaf undersides of most host plants. When populations are high, these mites can be found on all leaf surfaces and stems.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Cotoneaster (Cotoneaster)

  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Black walnut toxicity (herbaceous) ()
    Plants sensitive to juglone, a toxic substance produced by black walnut trees and to a lesser extent, butternut trees and shagbark hickories, may be stunted, have yellow or brown twisted leaves, may exhibit wilting or some or all of the plant parts, and die over time. Often an affected plant's vascular tissue will be discolored. Symptoms may occur rapidly, even within a few days of being transplanted into a walnut tree's root zone. Some plants may survive for years near a young walnut tree, only to succumb as the tree increases in size.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Pearslug sawfly (Caliroa cerasi)
    Adults are small, stout, shiny black wasps about 1/3" long that emerge in late June or early July. Eggs are inserted one by one in circular slits on the upper surfaces of leaves and hatch about 2 weeks later. Larvae are shiny, slimy, swollen at the head end, and range in color from olive green to orangeish-green. Full grown larvae leave plants to pupate in the soil and may emerge as adults in about 2 more weeks to produce a 2nd generation. Some remain dormant until the following spring.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae)
    This most common spider mite is miniscule (0.5mm) and prefers to colonize and lay eggs on leaf undersides of most host plants. When populations are high, these mites can be found on all leaf surfaces and stems.
  • Woolly aphids (Several)
    Multiple species of aphids characterized by covering their bodies in long waxy threads that cause them to appear wooly.

Dogwood (Cornus)

  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gray mold (Botrytis blight) (Botrytis cinerea)
    Causes brown, water-soaked spots or decay on leaves or petals. Once diseased tissue encircles the stem, the shoot will wilt. Botrytis is easily diagnosed by the fluffy gray, tan or brown mold produced on blighted plant parts under moist conditions. It rapidly blights flowers. Infected petals that fall onto foliage or stems can cause additional blighting and dieback.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Leaf scorch (Colletotrichum species)
    Caused by one of the fungi that causes anthracnose, leaf scorch usually appears on previously injured tissue in hot, humid weather. There may also be symptoms on stems. The disease will not move to healthy tissue. Symptoms include bleached, brown, or scorched tissue on leaves or stems, with small (pinhead-sized) masses of clear to yellowish spores (use a hand lens).
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Powdery mildew (woody plants) (Several)
    The upper and/or (less frequently) lower surface of leaves, as well as stems of infected plants, have a white, powdery appearance. They look as though someone has h pper and/or (less frequently) lower surface of leaves, as well as stems of infected plants, have a white, powdery appearance. They look as though someone has sprinkled them with talcum powder or powdered sugar.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Septoria leaf spot (woody plants) (Septoria species (W))
    Symptoms of Septoria leaf spot first appear at the base of affected plants, where small spots (approximately 1/4 inch diameter) appear on leaves and stems. These spots typically have a whitish center and a dark border. Eventually multiple spots on a single leaf will merge, leading to extensive destruction of leaf tissue. Septoria leaf spot can lead to total defoliation of lower leaves and even the death of an infected plant.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii)
    This disease is only active during hot weather. Plants may grow well in infested soil during most of the growing season and only be damaged during the hottest part of summer. Initial symptoms are yellowing or wilting of lower leaves, then basal stems decay, followed by the collapse of individual stems or entire plants. Inspection of the stem at the soil line reveals white mycelium (fungal strands) and small, tan spherical sclerotia (fungal survival structures) that resemble mustard seeds. Roots are unaffected. Decay of the stem at the soil line is common during hot, humid weather.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae)
    This most common spider mite is miniscule (0.5mm) and prefers to colonize and lay eggs on leaf undersides of most host plants. When populations are high, these mites can be found on all leaf surfaces and stems.
  • Whitefly (Aleyrodidae family)
    Adult whiteflies are small (1-2mm), white, fly-like insects related to scales, aphids and mealybugs. Their color comes from wax they create to cover their bodies. All whitefly stages are usually found on the undersides of leaves. There can be several generations per year depending on the environment.

Honeysuckle (Lonicera)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Lilac (Syringa)

  • Ash Yellows/Lilac Witches Broom (Candidatus Phytoplasma faxini)
    Ash yellows is a chronic, systemic disease of ash trees caused by a bacteria-like organism (Phytoplasma). The organism that causes ash yellows also causes a disease called lilac witches’-broom. The ash yellows phytoplasma is thought to be spread primarily through the feeding activity of leafhopper insects.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Privet (Ligustrum)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Quince (Chaenomeles)

  • Black walnut toxicity (herbaceous) ()
    Plants sensitive to juglone, a toxic substance produced by black walnut trees and to a lesser extent, butternut trees and shagbark hickories, may be stunted, have yellow or brown twisted leaves, may exhibit wilting or some or all of the plant parts, and die over time. Often an affected plant's vascular tissue will be discolored. Symptoms may occur rapidly, even within a few days of being transplanted into a walnut tree's root zone. Some plants may survive for years near a young walnut tree, only to succumb as the tree increases in size.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Rhododendron (Rhododendron)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Rose (Rosa)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Smoketree (Cotinus)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gray mold (Botrytis blight) (Botrytis cinerea)
    Causes brown, water-soaked spots or decay on leaves or petals. Once diseased tissue encircles the stem, the shoot will wilt. Botrytis is easily diagnosed by the fluffy gray, tan or brown mold produced on blighted plant parts under moist conditions. It rapidly blights flowers. Infected petals that fall onto foliage or stems can cause additional blighting and dieback.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Spiraea (Spiraea)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Sumac (Rhus)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Viburnum (Viburnum)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Weigela (Weigela)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

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