Xtremehorticulture

Privet Tree Leaves Black Spots are Disease? No.

Q. I’m sending you a photo of a leaf from my privet tree
that has some kind of fungus. Can you suggest some fungicide for me to use?

Spotting on privet leaves. It could be a disease problem but it would most likely not be
there if the tree was getting proper care.
A. I think it is just a lack of good nutrition and perhaps a
lack of adequate watering rather than a disease caused by a pathogen like a
fungus. Even if it were a fungus disease, it is more susceptible to disease if it is in poor health. However, too much irrigation water applied too often can look similar
to this.

            Not enough
water usually results in leaf drop in the early stages of stress with this
tree. I will post your picture on my blog for readers to see your particular
problem.

            Japanese
privet does much better in mixed landscapes rather than alone in rock mulch, if
you have it in rock mulch. They do not like soils that develop in a rock
environment and have trouble picking up the right nutrients from these types of
soils to stay healthy. Please be aware that this tree is not a desert plant so
it will require more care to keep it looking good.

EDDHA found in the ingredients of an iron chelate fertilizer
            Without
soil improvement you might try giving it a better fertilizer product. Fertilizers
for trees and shrubs from manufacturers such as Miracle Gro, Peters, Jobe’s
fertilizer spikes and others will provide better nutrition for the plant than
using an inexpensive agricultural fertilizer. Add to this an iron product that
contains the EDDHA chelate (look at the ingredients).

            Specialty
fertilizers like these are not inexpensive. However you can save some money by
not using it each time you fertilize. You can make an application and then
boost plant performance by using just a little bit of nitrogen fertilizer when
the plant needs it.

            But if the
plant is in rock landscape you will need at least one expensive fertilizer
treatment annually to improve your plant performance under the poor soil
conditions of rock mulch landscapes.

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