Thursday, April 21, 2011

Coconut Palm Injections Vital To Plant Care

Care of Coconut Plant

Care of Coconut Plantthumbnail
Coconuts are still an important food source on tropical islands.
The coconut palm tree has been around for at least 4,000 years. The coconuts are used for a variety of things including cooking oil, soap, medicine and fuel. The big husks on the tree can be used to make clothes and household items. Coconuts are usually found along tropical islands and beaches and can withstand flooding and high temperatures. The coconut palm can grow in a residential area as long as proper care is taken to ensure longevity.

Instructions

    • 1
      Place a coconut palm in full sun in an area with well-drained soiled. Coconut palms grow well in most soil types with a wide pH range, from 5.0 to 8. If you live in an area where the temperature falls below 70 degrees, it may be best to have your coconut palm in a container and move it indoors during the cooler months. Because coconuts can fall out of the tree, do not place the tree in an area where there is heavy foot traffic such as a sidewalk or driveway.
    • 2
      Water the coconut palm once a week unless there is sufficient rainfall. The palm needs at least 1 inch of water per watering especially if it was recently planted.
    • 3
      Fertilize the coconut palm with a palm tree fertilizer that contains potassium, nitrogen and manganese. Coconut palms need regular fertilizing with a controlled-release fertilizer. According to the University of Florida, the fertilizer "should have an analysis of approximately 8N-2P2O5-12K2O-4Mg." Check the label of the fertilizer to verify. Apply 1.5 lbs. of fertilizer every 100 square feet with a rotary spreader under the canopy of the coconut palm. Apply every two to three months as needed. Water thoroughly after each feeding to ensure the fertilizer seeps into the root system.
    • 4
      Treat coconut palm tree disease with an antibiotic injection into the trunk of the tree. This should be done by a professional arborist. The most common disease for coconut palms is lethal yellowing, which causes the tree's leaves to turn yellow and can kill the tree within six months. Injection of the antibiotic should be given every four months as soon as you notice the disease. The antibiotic can also be used to prevent the lethal yellowing as well.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Lethal Yellowing Can Cost You The Green

Lethal Yellowing  
Lethal yellowing is a disease first noticed in the Caribbean region of North America about 100 years ago. However, it was not until the 1950s and a devastating outbreak in Jamaica and the Florida Keys that the economic consequences of lethal yellowing were recognized and intensive research begun. More recently, the disease has spread to other areas of Florida and into Texas. There is no cure for lethal yellowing although it can be controlled in valuable trees with regular injections (four times annually) of
oxytetracycline. The good news is that palms native to Florida are generally resistant to this disease.

Symptoms
Lethal yellowing gets its name from the yellowing and drooping of palm fronds beginning with the lower fronds and advancing up through the crown. The disease characteristically has the following progression:

1. Coconuts, mature and immature, begin to drop from coconut palms and the fruit begin to drop from other varieties, a process called ‘shelling’.

2. Flower stalks (inflorescences) begin to blacken.

3. Palm fronds start to yellow (or, in the case of some species, turn greyish-brown), beginning with the older, lower fronds and progressing up through the crown.

4. The spear leaf collapses and the bud dies. By the time that this happens, the tree is already dead.

5. The entire crown falls from the tree leaving a forlorn ‘telephone pole’ stalk.

Unless treated, the tree dies within three to six months of the first symptom.

The Cause
The cause of lethal yellowing is believed to be a bacteria-like organism called a phytoplasma. Phytoplasmas are not yet well understood but, like bacteria, they can be controlled with antibiotics, in this case, oxytetracycline.

The Spread of the Disease
While there is not, as yet, definitive proof, the lethal yellowing micro-organism is most likely spread by an insect, the planthopper (myndus crudus). Again, research is continuing into the way in which this insect spreads the disease. Tests have demonstrated
that insecticides can slow the spread of planthoppers and, with them, lethal yellowing. However, large-scale spraying using currently available chemicals is ecologically damaging and not economically viable. Another approach may be to develop a
groundcover that discourages the insect, as young planthoppers feed on common grasses, but there have been no concrete results so far.

What To DoThere is to date no cure for lethal yellowing. Quarterly injections of oxytetracycline can keep the disease in check and this may be an option for extremely valuable residential landscape palms. Check with your local tree care specialist for advice regarding the cost
and procedure in your area. The best option in combating lethal yellowing is to plant palms resistant to the disease.

Popular Native Palms Resistant to Lethal Yellowing
Cabbage Palmetto (Sabal palmetto)
Royal Palm (Roystonea regia)
Paurotis Palm (Acoelorraphe wrightii)
Florida Thatch Palm (Thrinax radiata)
Key Thatch Palm (T. morrisii)


Common Imported Palms Resistant to Lethal Yellowing
Alexandra Palm (Archontophoenix alexandrae)
Carpentaria Palm (Carpentaria acuminata)
Yellow Cane Palm (Chrysalidocarpus lutescens)
Pygmy Date Palm (Phoenix roebelenii)
MacArthur Palm (Ptychosperma macarthurii)
Solitaire Palm (Ptychosperma elegans)
Mexican Washingtonia (Washingtonia robusta)
Foxtail Palm (Wodyetia bifurcata)
Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffianum)