Stand Alone Pages

Friday, February 17, 2023

Yellow Leaves on Potted Myer Lemon

Q.  I have a Myers lemon tree in a pot on a south facing patio. The wall near it faces east and there was a large pine tree out front so it receives shade in the afternoon. There are quite a few yellow leaves that just appeared. All the new fruit has turned black. It seems to me that maybe I just need to replace this tree. The lime tree is doing very well in a similar location.




A. The picture you sent to me shows a Myer lemon with ready to harvest fruit being grown in a small container with smaller plants growing around its base. Meyer lemon typically flowers sometime in January and February. The fruit can be harvested starting about now (December) with this harvest, finished by January, encourages new flower development for next year’s production.

Producing flowers and then fruit in midfall is early for Meyer lemon. Early flower development can be a sign that it is under some sort of stress. Certainly it's not normal for this type of tree at this time of year.

            All fruit trees and vegetables need a minimum of six hours of full direct sunlight. 8 hours is even better. In home landscapes the best sunlight for it in our hot climate in the summer months is during the cooler morning hours. Partial shade may be pleasant for people sitting on the patio but not for many plants that produce fruit or vegetables.

If shade is present during most sunlight hours, then I would recommend an ornamental plant for that spot with variegated or colorful leaves, not a flowering or a fruit-producing plant. A non-flowering ornamental handles shade better than a flowering plant, whether those flowers produce fruit or not.

Don't Plant Annuals at the Base of Perennial Trees

            Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, are the smaller plants demand for frequent watering compared to the tree. Growing a shallow-rooted plant or plants at the base of a deeper-rooted plant is a big “no-no” regarding how often water is applied. Shallow-rooted plants “signal” they need water applied more often than deeper-rooted plants, so they get water applied more often than the watering frequency needed for deeper-rooted plant needs.

This type of watering can suffocate the roots of a deeper-rooted plant. Watering a deeper-rooted plant too often can produce leaf drop, flower drop, fruit blackening, and a tree that's “loose in the soil”. Trees that develop “collar rot disease need to be staked after just a few years of growth. Does that sound like your fruit tree?

            I would replace this tree with a plant that requires moderate to low levels of sunlight. If you want to grow other plants along with it, select plants with a similar rooting depth and need for applied water.

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