posted
We have a house that is three years old, and has several american boxwoods in the flowerbed out front. I have other flowering plants in there now, and all have been doing really great in past years, but all of the sudden my boxwoods are looking a little dry, then mostly dry, then dead, and whatever is doing it literally from one side of the bush to the whole thing, then to the start of another. we've lost them one by one gradually. I've treated, but have no idea why just the boxwoods are being attacked, or what it could be. Someone mentioned a root beatle? what could I do for that? Please HELP!
Posts: 4 | From: memphis, tn | Registered: Apr 2006
| Logged: 66.61.93.132
posted
That looks like a possibility, as well as the other nematode option written about later in that same article. I've applied fungicides and such, but maybe for some reason this year my flowerbeds just aren't draining like they should be... I'll have to look into it:) Thanks! (It's amazing to me that you knew where to find this. I had already tried a search for it:)
Posts: 4 | From: memphis, tn | Registered: Apr 2006
| Logged: 24.165.178.251
posted
Phytophthera is almost impossible to control. Various forms of it affect all sorts of plants from tomatoes and other vegies to fruit trees and large trees. Resistant varieties are being hybridized all the time with the food crops. It may be best to remove the ones which are dead and replace with something else which is not susceptible. Drastic measures.The disease, if that's what it is , will almost certainly travel to the other plants.
bbbbbbbbb The secret is the soil. Posts: 1184 | From: East Coast | Registered: Sep 2004
| Logged: 146.38.90.16