Tree stress

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y: Scott Eckert, County Extension Agent, Horticulture
Current Date:  November 24, 2014
Release Date: as soon as possible

You think you have stress?  How about being a tree?  Environmental stressors such as drought, heat and cold are cumulative. In other words, trees can gradually weaken under
continued stresses such as drought until they reach a point where significant damage or even death can occur quickly. Damage that occurred earlier may not appear until summer weather arrives a year or two down the road. Plants may wither seemingly overnight. These trees probably died earlier but had enough food reserves to put out leaves and even to grow for a period of time.

When the food reserves became depleted, the plants died suddenly.  Before any tree is cut down, check the twigs. Dead trees will have brittle, dry stems that snap.  Live stems may break, but they won´t be dry. If the tree is still alive, give it time to put out a new set of
leaves. Trees that lose individual branches should have those branches cut out. Note that there are other possible causes of branch loss such as verticillium wilt. You may want to take a sample to the county extension office to be checked. Trees that are slow to leaf out need to be given extra care so that further stress is avoided.

If you suspect you have plants under stress, try to water them once a week if there is no rainfall. Trees should be watered to a depth of 12 to 18 inches if possible. Water from the trunk out to the edge of the branches. Though this will not reach all the roots of a tree, it will reach the majority of them. Trees normally have at least 80 percent of their roots in the top foot of soil. Use a dowel or metal rod to check the depth of water. The rod will penetrate moist soil easily but will stop when dry earth is reached.

Shrubs should be watered to a depth of 8 to 12 inches. Check the depth of watering by pushing a wooden dowel or metal rod into the soil. It will stop when it hits dry soil.

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