| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Dying leaves on living branches |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
My 2 fig trees got through a colder than usual NC winter OK. Recently leaves on 2/3 of the smaller tree have dried up, and the small fruit with them. Peeling the bark back just a bit reveals green, which I interpret that even the small branches are not dead (or not dead yet!). The other 1/3 with normal leaves and fruit looks fine. I did leave my winter root-insulating burlap coffee bean bags in place too long, perhaps trapping moisture around the base. I keep learning more – just found out figs prefer drier areas (mine are in an area that gets rain runoff, although the folks that planted them about 5 years ago installed a French drain nearby). I was just about to prune the dead-looking side way back, when I found this forum. I really love my figs, so I am glad there is a group like this. Ideas? |
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snaglpus
Registered: Posts: 4,072 |
Welcome to the forum, I'm in Charlotte and usually with that happens it means the engergy is going some place else in the tree. It really could be a number of things. First make sure the tree is getting plenty of water. We've had record high temps in the Carolinas this year so heat is a major issue. Third, your tree could have been hit by the ambrosia beetle. Google it....not to scare you but the beetle does major damage on fig trees. |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
Thanks for the fast reply! I see no signs of beetles or larvae, but I'll keep an eye out. All the deadness is on one trunk, all the healthy ones on another. So you think it could be lack of water, not too much! How can I tell? |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi, |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
Maybe some sort of toxin? |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
Figs are in backyard, protected from random acts, and no BBQ's or chemicals nearby |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi, |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
Such a shame a beautiful tree like that is getting destroyed. I know you scratched the bark on the upper stems, but try it on the lower trunk. |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
wow - there is so much wisdom here - so glad I found this group! Thanks. |
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Ruuting
Registered: Posts: 613 |
Wow! That's a real shame. Sorry to see that happening. I have no advice, I'm pretty new at this too. Our (Northern) winter-killed trees usually bounce back from the roots. The scary thing about your trees is that surely they are sharing roots, so it may spread if it's some bug. Any chance the right trunk was pulled on by wind or a person, and it got severed from the roots? |
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Gr8Figs
Registered: Posts: 204 |
[QUOTE=snaglpus] Third, your tree could have been hit by the ambrosia beetle. Google it....not to scare you but the beetle does major damage on fig trees. [/QUOTE] |
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mic
Registered: Posts: 103 |
It also looks like symptoms of some form of root problem like root rot. If it is, you might quickly want to start some cuttings from the remaining healthy part while you can, as there would be a risk it succumbs later. |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
Last photo - no sign of distress in the branches I cut to test. At least to my eye. |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
I have seen a few of these bugs - could they be a culprit? |
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Gr8Figs
Registered: Posts: 204 |
That looks like a picture wing fly in your photo,harmless to trees. |
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bullcityfig
Registered: Posts: 7 |
That's a relief about the bug! By paint, do you recommend an asphalt based sealer or just a latex paint? Up to now I've just left a pruning cut natural. |
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ohjustaguy
Registered: Posts: 324 |
I would remove the dying trunk/side ASAP hoping to help stem the spread of whatever it is to the healthy trunk. |
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Gr8Figs
Registered: Posts: 204 |
I use roofing tar to protect the wound from future insect damage. |
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