Xtremehorticulture

Leaf Yellowing on Locust Possible Sunburn and Borers

Q. Do you have idea why some many of the leaves on my locust tree are turning yellow? A. The most frequent problem with locust trees, Idaho or black locust, is borers in the trunks. This will cause exactly what you’re talking about, yellowing of leaves and leaf drop.             This is followed by branch dieback. Dieback of limbs may take a couple of seasons after the initial borer attack but if you are not looking for borer damage early, you will see leaf drop a couple of years into the attack.             Borers entered the trees usually where the tre is sunburned. This is normally on the west and south facing sides of the trunk or limbs. Horizontal limbs may be damaged on the upper surfaces as well.             Check the bark on the trunk or limbs see if it is loose. It may easily pull away from the trunk particularly on the south and west sides. Damage is usually on larger diameter parts of the tree.             Remove bark away from damage to areas and clean the damage down to fresh wood. You don’t need to paint it but if you want it painted, paint it.             Use a liquid insecticide soil drench to help protect the tree and give it a chance to recover during early stages of an attack.

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White Flowers from Purple Locust Tree?

Q. We had a beautiful purple locust in our back yard that produced a profusion of purple flowers every spring until it was called to locust heaven. Before departing this world it sent off a runner which has sprouted into a lovely tree that is now eleven feet tall and producing white flowers. What’s with that? A. I am making a lot of assumptions in answering this. I am assuming what you are seeing is a locust and not some other plant that happened to grow in that location. I am also assuming the flower looks exactly the same as the purple one, just that it is white.             If both of these are correct then you are seeing the rootstock suckering. The rootstock used for producing the locust with purple flowers is a black locust. Black locust has white flowers but otherwise looks identical to the purple locust.             Oftentimes the locust that has purple flowers is grafted onto a black locust rootstock. The purple part of the plant dies. Suckers grow from the roots of the black locust rootstock and have white flowers.

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