I have
been researching and have not found a conclusive reason for this. The
agricultural extension at NMSU wrote its not a matter of disease but rather a
cultural practice. Soil may be to alkaline and getting to much water. According
to Dr. Natalie Goldberg, NMSU Extension Plant Pathologists, "No plant
pathogenic microorganism's were isolated from submitted samples. The symptoms
occur on trees well watered as well as those that receive little water."
The leaf drop starts when temperatures increase.
Can you
bring me up to date with your latest information about this type of leaf drop.
If I can't correct, both trees are headed for the cemetery.
A. I did print nearly everything this homeowner told me
he did for this tree which was a lot. I abbreviated what he told me for the newspaper. It does not sound
like a lack of water.
Older picture of Chitalpa in Las Vegas. |
Chitalpa
is regarded as somewhat drought tolerant which means you should be able to
water it less often than, let’s say, a purple leaf plum and still have it look
good. It is not a desert species like mesquite or palo verde, but it can handle
some lack of irrigation without dropping its leaves.
Limb dieback of Chitalpa from 2013. |
Unfortunately,
all Chitalpa trees carry a vascular plugging disease unless propagated from
seed. All the named varieties like ‘Pink Dawn’ were propagated from cuttings so
they will be carrying this disease as well. You can’t see this disease
outwardly but one of its symptoms can be leaf drop, starting particularly when
temperatures get hotter.
Unfortunately,
Chitalpa infected with this disease is not a good thing to have around grapes
or oleander either. The disease can be carried to either of these plants where
it can kill several types of grapes like Thompson Seedless or it can stay
hidden and spread from a bacterial reservoir that can be housed in oleander.
The fact
your tree has leaf drop in summer is suspicious. I would remove it. Replace it
with a tree you like of a size in scale with your home. Single story home use a
tree with mature height of around 20 ft. Two story home, look for a tree from
20 to 35 feet tall when mature. Smaller trees always use less water. Go to SNWA
plant selector website to help you find one.
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