Salt Burn on Leaf Edges: Causes and Solutions
Southwest Yard & Garden
By Dr. Marisa Thompson
Rose leaves with symptoms of salt burn. Photo credits L. Peters.
Question: Can you tell what seems to be plaguing the various
rosebushes in my backyard?
– L. Peters, Sandoval County, NM
Answer: Thanks for sending such great photos with your rosebush question. These
photos depict rose foliage with varying degrees of browning edges on the
leaflets and some white crusty buildup on leaflet surfaces, especially at the
margins. Some of the leaflets have a burned look with black edges.
First off, the leaf margin damage looked to me like salt burn, and I
asked Dr. Curtis Smith, retired NMSU horticulture specialist, to weigh in. Dr.
Smith agreed that the tissue necrosis at the leaflet tips and margins might be
due to salt burn. Salt accumulation at these points is caused when dissolved
salts are brought up to the leaves from the roots during transpiration. This
could be due to salts in the soil or in the irrigation water that accumulate
over time. As water transpires from tiny pores in the leaves, the dissolved
salts are left behind. The salts left at the leaf margin kill plant cells in
those spots when they build to toxic levels, causing that burned appearance, as
well as the crusty white buildup, especially on the older leaves.
I recently received photos of similarly damaged mulberry leaves from
Albuquerque. In the past year, the NMSU Plant Diagnostic Clinic (https://aces.nmsu.edu/ces/plantclinic/)
has processed leaf samples diagnosed with salt damage from Bernalillo, Doña
Ana, Eddy, Otero, and Valencia Counties from all kinds of landscape plants,
including boxwood, juniper, ponderosa pine, euonymus, crape myrtle, sycamore,
and several fruit trees. I’m trying to demonstrate that salt problems are
prevalent in our soils and, therefore, our plants too.
Burned margins on these pecan leaflets caused by excessive soil salt levels. Photo credit NMSU Extension Guide H-657, “Diseases and Other Disorders of Pecan in New Mexico.” (https://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H657/welcome.html).
The salt burn symptoms on roses may be alleviated by irrigating once or
twice with a larger volume of water to help push the salts down through the soil
profile and away from the roots. This technique can also be used once in the
winter after leaves have dropped when more water is expected to percolate down
into the soil since the plant isn’t actively taking as much water up from the
root zone. Salt buildup often occurs in the top few inches of the soil profile
with repeated shallow waterings. I’m also concerned that we are increasing the
chances of salt toxicity in our soils by over fertilizing. Many fertilizers
come in the form of salts and may either exacerbate or even cause salt burn on
leaves.
Both Dr. Smith and Ms. Doolittle recommend mulching to conserve moisture
and help keep soil temperatures moderate. But no matter what you do, the
portions of the leaf that have browned will never green back up, so you’ll have
to be patient and wait for new green leaves to emerge.
Powdery mildew, which is very common on roses and other landscape
plants, especially during monsoon season in New Mexico, may also be present on
the leaf surfaces in some of the photos. Powdery mildew is caused by a fungus
that’s always present, but around here it doesn’t usually show up noticeably
until late summer. It also doesn’t usually cause much of a problem, other than
being mildly unsightly. My general recommendation for powdery mildew on
ornamental plants is to first double check that you’re not accidentally
sprinkling water on the leaves when you irrigate, and then, instead of applying
an antifungal spray, just sit back and blame it on the rain. For more powdery
mildew identification and treatment tips, visit https://nmsudesertblooms.blogspot.com/2017/09/blame-it-on-rain-identification-and.html.
Powdery mildew on chokecherry in Colfax County, NM. August 2017.
Note: This question was originally addressed in Oct. 2017. It has been modified for reprint in Aug. 2019. Both columns were written by Marisa Thompson.
For more gardening information, including
decades of archived Southwest Yard & Garden columns, visit the NMSU
Extension Horticulture page (http://desertblooms.nmsu.edu/), follow us
on social media (@NMDesertBlooms), or contact your County Extension office
(https://aces.nmsu.edu/county).
Marisa Thompson, PhD, is the Extension
Horticulture Specialist for New Mexico State University and is based at the
Agricultural Science Center at Los Lunas.
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