Apple tree chlorosis: why does the disease appear and how to get rid of it?
The apple tree pleases with tasty and juicy fruits, but many dangerous diseases lie in wait for the culture. Chlorosis is one of them. This article will tell you how to deal with this trouble.
Reasons for the appearance
Chlorosis of the apple tree, like many other diseases, occurs against the background of a lack of trace elements and a deficiency of insolation. If the disease is not eliminated in a timely manner, it can last a whole season. In this case, a violation of normal metabolism and a reduction in yield are inevitable. The disease can be caused by a deficiency of a variety of nutrients. The viral nature of apple chlorosis is almost excluded.
Varieties and signs of the disease
It is not difficult to notice that the apple tree fell ill with chlorosis.
When such a disease occurs:
- the foliage first turns pale, and then begins to turn yellow;
- leaves are covered with heterogeneous dots of dark colors;
- the perimeter and tips of the leaves die off;
- while the veins retain a green color.
Different forms of chlorosis give an unequal "clinical picture". So, if the apple tree lacks iron, or it is poorly absorbed, the leaves begin to turn yellow in the upper part of the shoots, only then the lesion spreads down. The poor absorption of iron is largely due to the cultivation of trees on carbonate soils. But the appearance of faded foliage at the bottom suggests that the plants suffer from a nitrogen deficiency. If young apple trees are faced with a lack of potassium, the foliage becomes colorless in the middle of the shoots.
Yellowing areas in the intervals of the veins and the appearance of dark inclusions surrounded by dying areas indicate a lack of manganese, as well as magnesium. This condition has received a special name - spotted chlorosis. It is provoked by an excessive amount of lime in the ground. In apple trees affected by spotted chlorosis, lightening of the leaves first occurs near the bases of the shoots. Another sign pointing specifically to this disease is a reduction in yield.
A yellowed crown often expresses an unmet need for oxygen and sulfur. The risk increases if you plant an apple tree on heavy soil, where the air permeability of the root area is low. Another likely cause is excessively high groundwater levels. Accurate determination of the type of pathology is possible only in its earliest phases. Later, the lesion covers all or almost all foliage, therefore masking of some forms by other varieties of chlorosis is likely.
It is important to consider that other diseases of the apple tree may be similar to chlorosis. If it is affected by a mosaic, the color changes unevenly - spots and even stripes are clearly visible. Gradually, they turn from rich yellow to pale, and then die off. Diseased leaves fall prematurely to the ground. By how clear the pattern is, professional agronomists can even recognize the strain of the virus.
Unlike mosaic, chlorosis causes changes not only on the leaves, but also on the fruits and shoots. It also excludes such a characteristic consequence of the mosaic virus as delayed fruiting. Additionally, you should check if the tree is affected by chlorotic ringspot. It is expressed in the appearance of dotted yellow spots on the leaf plates.Small spots are systematically transformed into rings, and the leaves are deformed.
When chlorotic ring spot occurs, the overall growth of the apple tree slows down. Her shoots are too short, the increase in the circumference of the trunk stops. Diseased plants do not survive cold periods very well. The need to carefully check the actual nature of the disease is due to the fact that viral disorders with a similar picture are extremely dangerous.
At the slightest doubt, it is recommended to consult with professionals.
Means for treatment
Eliminating forms of the disorder that are not associated with infections is relatively easy - you just need to make up for the deficiency of the problematic microelement. Chlorosis can occur in any season. You need to deal with it immediately, when the first symptoms appear. Protective agents can be applied both by spraying and by adding reagents to the area near the trunk. The selection of the option takes into account the characteristics of the disease.
The fight against iron deficiency most often involves the use of special compounds - chelates. Along with their use in its pure form, many farmers prefer to use branded products (Agricola and other similar drugs). Processing occurs 2 or 3 times at intervals of 10 to 12 days. Experienced farmers often abandon expensive factory mixtures and use iron sulfate. A typical recipe is as follows: 90 g of citric acid and 45 g of vitriol are diluted in 10 liters of water. Sometimes the components are replaced with a combination of 45 g of vitriol and 30 g of vitamin C. You can pour 1 affected plant with the prepared mixture.
If iron starvation is very serious, injection of iron sulfate is practiced.You will have to drill small channels, pour the desired composition into them and close the entrance with cement. There are also dry injections when iron sulfate tablets are used. But this is an emergency measure, and only improving the composition of the soil helps to radically improve the situation. If iron is not absorbed, it is necessary to achieve a reduction in the amount of carbonates in the soil.
Iron deficiency can be prevented by improving the composition of the earth in advance. To do this, 1.5 kg of vitriol is mixed with 60 kg of humus, 100 liters of water are added and used to water the tree trunk. You can also dig several notches 0.4 m deep in the same circle. 0.5 kg of iron sulfate is scattered over these recesses, trying to distribute it evenly. An interesting fact is that in the past they tried to fight iron chlorosis by burying metal objects near apple trees.
The fight against nitrogen and potassium chlorosis is carried out through complex dressings, including both substances at the same time. Top dressing is carried out in the spring.
From improvised means are useful (when diluted in 10 liters of water):
- 35 g of urea;
- 25 g of potassium sulfate;
- 40 g ammonium sulfate;
- 40 g of ammonium nitrate or nitroammophoska;
- 50 g of azophoska.
Chlorosis associated with a deficiency of magnesium and manganese is eliminated with two top dressings at once. Magnesium deficiency disappears if you put dolomite flour under the root and water the plants with magnesium nitrate in the form of a solution with a concentration of 0.1%. Additional support will be the use of magnesium sulfate, 150 g of which is diluted in 10 liters of water. The solution is used to spray the leaves. Manganese is transferred to apple trees as part of wood ash, so-called manganese sludge can also be used. The foliage is sprayed with a 0.05% sulfate solution.
To compensate for the lack of oxygen, you need:
- systematic loosening of the trunk circle;
- addition of organic substances;
- proper mulching.
Preventive measures
In order for apple trees not to suffer from chlorosis, it is required from the very beginning to determine the composition of the soil and adjust it with various additives. At the same time, it is worth striving not just to increase the presence of a particular component, but to achieve an optimal balance. Since the necessary substances are poorly absorbed by apple trees growing on carbonate soil, gypsum is required. It also helps with the excessive presence of lime in the ground.
Plastering is carried out at the very beginning of spring, when the trunk circles are dug up. If the earth is acidic, on the contrary, liming is required. Planting trees in areas with poor drainage should be avoided.
If such a mistake is nevertheless made, the only way out is to transplant an apple tree. You should also deal with harmful insects that carry pathogens of infectious forms of chlorosis.
For treatment and prevention of chlorosis, see below.