Xtremehorticulture

Century Plant (American Agave) Not Growing Well

Q.
We have a century plant thriving over the past 10-12 years in our front yard.
Towards the end of summer, we noticed lower leaves getting soft and tender,
leathery even, eventually turning yellow. No new shoots are visible emerging
from the core. It gets watered occasionally.

Century plant or American agave. A magnet for agave weevils.


A.
Century plant is an agave weevil magnet! My guess is that’s the problem. The
only method I know to control agave weevil is to apply an insecticide around
the base of all agaves in March or April of every spring. The insecticide is used
to protect the plant from spring infestations. Sprinkle a granular insecticide at
the base of the plant and lightly water it. The other option is possibly to drench the soil immediately around the agave with systemic such as imidacloprid (if the label permits). 

Warning sign of American agave that it might have agave weevils. Apply granular insecticide in the spring as a prophylactic treatment.


            The adult weevils have wings and can
fly. They can fly from a neighbor’s plants to a different neighbor’s landscape.
These adult beetles lay their eggs in the crotches of the agave in the spring.
They don’t use calendars but fly during the spring when it’s perfect weather. That
is why the timing for an application is sometime “in the spring”. The “grubs” hatch
from the eggs and tunnel inside the core of many different types of agaves and
cause their tunneling damage. Sometimes the damage is so severe it kills the
plants outright or it might cause a smaller problem when plants are larger.

This is the type of problem agave weevil can do on established plants. Notice the base was rotten and the plant “collapsed”.


            The other usual problem is watering
too often. This can weaken or kill the plant. It doesn’t sound like that is
your problem. I would caution you to water the plants deeply and not just a
sprinkle them with a hose. Depending on the size of the agave it can take from
5 to 15 gallons of water varying from a small to a large American agave. If the
American agave is large, then use three drip emitters located about 12 to 18
inches from the plant in a triangular spacing and watch for signs of stress. Apply
water about three to six weeks apart during the summer.

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