Knowledgebase
Japanese maple disease #876904
Asked July 11, 2024, 11:17 PM EDT
Howard County Maryland
Expert Response
Making sure the plant is regularly monitored for watering needs is all you can do for now. If leaves fall before autumn, try to collect them and dispose of them so they don't harbor spores under the tree, though if some blow away or can't be collected, it's not going to doom the tree. (Spores can always blow into the area from other regions in a future year, and plant disease spread and severity is often influenced heavily by the weather.)
Miri
Sent from my iPad
On Jul 12, 2024, at 2:15 PM, Ask Extension <<personal data hidden>> wrote:
Leaves wet by a sprinkler will not scorch in the sense of developing burn marks; the phenomenon called "scorch" in plants is caused by leaf desiccation damage, though either high heat, insufficient root moisture, or too much direct sun for plant species adapted to shadier conditions. Water droplets don't burn leaves in the sun, though if hot water from the hose (if it wasn't flushed-out first) contacting leaves certainly might damage them (though in that case, the resulting damage would probably look like they were melting, like sautéed spinach, which is how steam weeder tools kill weed foliage).
Miri
We do not recommend spraying for mites in this situation. Not only will it require pesticides that could harm other organisms (though insecticidal soap or horticultural oil would be lower-risk), but it could worsen leaf damage, since even plant-safe pesticides can injure leaf tissue if it's already been heavily fed-upon or damaged in other ways. Plus, no pesticide should be applied during temperatures above 85 degrees, or plant tissue damage is almost certain to occur.
You could spray plain water if you wanted, as a strong blast from a garden hose (of course, let out any hot water first) aimed at leaf undersides might dislodge some mites, if they are abundant. Nothing will reverse the existing leaf damage, though, even if the original issue abates, since leaves cannot heal. (Next spring's leaves will be normal, since this won't carry over.)
Instead, just continue monitoring the tree for watering needs for now in this ongoing drought. You can rake-up the Redbud's leaves this autumn after they fall and dispose of them just in case they harbor a pest for next year, but that isn't too likely in this case and so it's not a great risk if you don't remove its fallen leaves for any reason.
Miri
On Jul 16, 2024, at 4:45 PM, Ask Extension <<personal data hidden>> wrote: