Posted by Carol O’Meara, Boulder County Extension
Trees this summer dealt with many challenges, from wet feet to intense heat, and some are starting to throw in the towel. Although temperatures continue to bake us, symptoms of stress on our trees from a summer of strange weather are showing up all over town. Help your trees go into fall with a late summer tree inspection.
“We do a tree survey every summer; it’s how we’ve picked up on problems,” said Kathleen Alexander, City of Boulder Forester. “It’s a (health) checkup. Trees need routine maintenance like pruning or pest control.” Alexander shared pointers for giving your tree a checkup yourself:
- Is there anything different or unusual about the tree? Stand back so that you can see the tree from top to bottom. Does the canopy look full all the way around, and is it the same as in previous years?
- Is the crown thinner; can you suddenly see daylight through it? Loss of leaves could be due to stress on the tree or from frost early in the year that prevented the tree from having a full set of leaves. A third reason is mid-summer leaf drop.
Mid-summer leaf drop is characterized by trees leafing out normally in spring, then dropping leaves in late July or August for seemingly no reason. When trees lose a lot of fine roots during dry winter, they can’t support summer's lush canopies. Leaf tips brown and leaves drop from the tree.
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Compounding the mystery of leaf problems this year is the cool wet weather followed by heat, then cool moist weather followed by more heat. Leaf spot diseases, such as Marssonina or Septoria thrive in the type of weather we had. Infection spread during the cooler weather and symptoms are showing up now.
Fruiting bodies of fungi usually show on the leaf as small, pimple-like speckles and often have red or yellow halos around the diseased area. Bacterial disease on leaves will have this halo as well, along with a slimy or greasy looking center spot. If your tree develops these ‘leaf zits’, you should suspect a fungal or bacterial disease.