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Extension Master GardenerSM Volunteers of Buncombe County

drought

Abiotic Plant Disorders: You be the Detective!

July 16, 2019

We usually think of plant problems as due to pests or diseases: Biotic agents! These living organisms include insects, disease causing pathogens, nematodes, parasitic plants, and viruses. But abiotic—nonliving agents—can also injure our landscape plants. If you think about it, you’ve probably lost plants to many of these, which include environmental extremes in moisture and/or temperature; mechanical damage, such as severe root cutting; and chemical factors, such as high soil salinity or herbicide damage.
Accurate diagnosis is key to remedying any plant problem, biotic, abiotic, or both!

How to diagnosis?
• Identify the plants: Determine the botanical name: genus, species and family—plant labels usually have plant genus and species and with that information you can look up the plant family.
• Identify the symptoms: Chlorotic (yellowing), necrotic (blackening or death), or distorted plant parts. Be thorough and accurate!
• Inspect the whole plant: Examine all parts of the plant, not just the injured area.
• Look for patterns: Are symptoms uniform throughout the plant or scattered?
• Inspect the site: Is the soil well-drained, is there recent evidence of disturbance, how long has the plant been in the ground?
• Do you have any records of plant care—watering, fertilizing, pruning, spraying?
• Identify likely causes from the information collected— Keep in mind that there may be multiple causes!
• Collect samples and submit for testing to rule out disease or insect problems at the North Carolina Plant Disease and Insect Clinic.

Examples and symptoms of common environmental abiotic plant problems:

Water—Too much or too little—both can damage plants! Waterlogging kills roots if oxygen levels in the root zone are too low, but excess soil moisture is more commonly a factor in root disease. At the other extreme, insufficient moisture can result in scorch symptoms on foliage, stunting, leaf yellowing, leaf drop, early Fall color; and death of flowers and fruits.

Flooding
Drought Damage to Trees

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunscald usually occurs in late winter or early spring when sunlight heats tree bark during the day. This causes the water in the ground to start to rise from the roots. With freezing nighttime temperatures, this water freezes within the bark tissue and an elongated canker can form that appears discolored and sunken. Cracking and peeling bark may follow. It may be the next spring or summer when new growth occurs before the damage shows. Tree with thin bark such as beech (Fagus), dogwood (Cornus), honey locust (Gleditsia triacanthos), linden (Tilia), mountain ash (Sorbus americana) and sugar maple (Acer saccharum), and newly planted trees are especially susceptible.

Frost Crack …. University of Michigan

Wind moving across leaves takes moisture from them, sometimes in excessive amounts resulting in a scorched appearance. Evergreen trees and shrubs are particularly susceptible to this during the winter when the roots cannot extract water from frozen soil.

Wind

Low temperature—Plants have critical temperature levels at or below which they may experience frost or freezing injury. Plant cells are injured when the temperature falls below a critical level for a species. Injury at above freezing temperatures is called chilling injury. Such injury may affect any plant parts of both evergreen and deciduous plants. Young leaves are most sensitive to lower temperatures; injured leaves look water soaked and black. Flowering plants putting on new growth are especially susceptible. It may be a few weeks before you see damage from cold temperatures. To minimize injury from low temperatures be sure to select plants that are hardy in your area—Zones 5b to 7a, depending where you live in Buncombe county.

Freezing Temperatures

Article by Bob Wardwell, Extension Master GardenerSM Volunteer

Abiotic Disorders of Plants  https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/5-diseases-and-disorders#section_heading_7612

Sunscald of Woody Plants www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/gardens-gardening/your-garden/help-for-the-home-gardener/advice-tips-resources/pests-and-problems/environmental/sunscald/sunscald-of-woody-plants.aspx

Abiotic Disorders of Landscape Plants: A Diagnostic Guide, Costello, L., et al., University of California Press, February 2014.

How to submit a sample for Insect and disease identification: https://projects.ncsu.edu/cals/plantpath/extension/clinic/submit-sample.html

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Categories General Gardening Tags abiotic, Diagnosis, drought, freeze, sunscald, wind

Drought Tolerant Gardens: Take Steps Beyond Irrigation to Help Survive Low Rainfall

July 17, 2017

Gardeners are often frustrated in June and July as they expect well-performing, productive, and beautiful gardens. After all, it is the prime growing season. All is right, except that the rains are not coming. Drought is here.

Rain garden at N.C. Arboretum, Asheville
Rain garden at N.C. Arboretum in Asheville

Turns out that drought is a local thing, determined by the rainfall one receives on one’s own garden. Asheville (downtown) has the lowest annual rainfall of any recording site in North Carolina. Moving out from town, rainfall varies greatly on average and for any given year. Your garden may be experiencing a drought when others are not.

How does a gardener prepare for the inevitability of lower than expected rainfall—drought? Consider these eight tips.

Plan and design
Think about your garden. Garden design is the first order of business. The shape and slope of the site affects the water available to plants. Rapid drainage of soils on steep slopes reduces the water available to plants. Shade may increase the water availability, but shade trees themselves require large amounts of water. Grouping plants with comparable water requirements improves efficiency if irrigation is needed.

Improve soil
Soil type and texture determine water availability to plants. Plants, with very few exceptions, take up water through their root systems. Roots seek water in the soil. Our prevalent clay or clay-loam soils hold water well, but release it slowly. Soils may seem wet, but the water is not readily available to the plants. For many uses, especially for annual flowers and vegetable gardens, improving the soil with organic soil amendments will increase the available water.

Select appropriate plants
Gardeners love plants—sometimes exotic plants from the far reaches of the earth that require large amounts of water to sustain them. When selecting plants, consider the water requirements and your commitment to provide extra water when needed. Select low-water use plants. Native plants often adapt better to local conditions and can be more drought tolerant when fully established.

Use practical turf areas
Know your turf grass. Cool season grasses, the most common in our area, have two dormant seasons. Keeping a lush turf in midsummer is challenging. It may be best to let it go dormant, as it wants to be. Consider watering in spring and fall if the rains do not come for a more lush turf in cooler seasons. Secondly, consider reducing the area in turf. Large expanses of grass can require considerable irrigation, not to mention frequent fertilization and mowing.

Mulch
Covering the soil in garden areas with mulch reduces the loss of water to the atmosphere. Use non-dyed, organic materials only and cover deeply—three to four inches. Ideally, one would use only materials available on their property, such as decaying leaves and other plant materials. This is not always practical. An alternative is to grow soil-covering plants such as a groundcover.

Maintain appropriately
Keep beds and vegetable gardens free from competing plants (weeds). Cutting or pulling young plants keeps gardens neat and makes more water available. Consider using the pulled weeds as compost.

Rain barrels at N.C. Arboretum, Asheville
Rain barrels capture water at the N.C. Arboretum in Asheville

Irrigate efficiently
Irrigate plants when needed, but do so efficiently. Plants need deep water at the roots, but only when the soil is dry. Feel the soil with your hands to determine if it needs water. Spraying water over the tops of plants does not provide efficient watering.

Capture water
Create land shapes, install rain gardens, and use rain barrels to catch and take advantage of the rainfall that reaches garden areas. Move water to needed plants using gravity where possible.

Concluding thoughts
Gardening in drought conditions is rewarding if gardeners plan and act as if they expect dry conditions. If rains are above expectations, all the better. Being prepared rewards with better results.

Article written by James Wade, Extension Master GardenerSM Volunteer.

Learn more at upcoming event
On August 17, the public is invited to attend the Gardening the Mountains presentation, “Drought Tolerant Gardens.” James Wade, our speaker, will expand on the ideas he presents in this blog. Watch for an upcoming blog in early August announcing the time and place for this presentation.

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Categories Water Management Tags drought, irrigation, rainwater, waterwise gardening

U.S. Drought Monitor: Asheville Now in Moderate Drought*

July 9, 2015

But first, recognize that in our mountains all weather is local! Native Americans referred to the Weaverville area as the “Dry Ridge” and it is indeed one of the driest points in the eastern US. Yet only some 30 miles away but several thousand feet higher in altitude, Alta Pass is among the wettest, continually dampened as rising air from the west is forced to drop its load of moisture.

Then you have anomalies like the fact that Asheville’s “official” rainfall is not actually measured at Asheville. The official weather station for Asheville, North Carolina is located at the Asheville-Hendersonville Airport, ten miles south of, and not even in the same county as Asheville.

imageSo that’s why your own journal notes and observations are important. Gathering data from your own rain gauge and thermometer readings can be helpful in comparing one year to the next and identifying needs or trends in your garden. Even better than judging rainfall by the condition of your neighbor’s lawn!

Back to the Drought Monitor. By their definition in a “moderate drought” we can expect “Some damage to crops, pastures; streams, reservoirs, or low wells; some water shortages developing or imminent; voluntary water-use restrictions requested.”

So, fellow gardeners, it’s time to start setting priorities on which plants get first dibs for irrigation. Get outside before breakfast and water early in the morning. Mulch to help conserve what soil moisture you do have. Maybe change some priorities for your plantings in the fall garden. Perhaps let some space stand fallow or with a cover crop.

imageAnd a self-serving reminder: Buncombe County Cooperative Extension has rain barrels for sale! Even occasional brief rain can fill a rain barrel.

*U.S. Drought Monitor of North Carolina, June 23, 2015 http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu

For more information about coping with drought: http://content.ces.ncsu.edu/coping-with-drought-a-guide-to-understanding-plant-response-to-drought.pdf

Article written by Glenn Palmer, Extension Master Gardener Volunteer.

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Categories Water Management Tags Alta Pass, cover crop, drought, mulch, rain barrels, U.S. drought monitor

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