Excess Water Problems on Woody Ornamentals

PP028 (5/03R)

By Dr. Sharon M. Douglas
Department of Plant Pathology and Ecology
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station
123 Huntington Street
P. O. Box 1106
New Haven, CT 06504-1106

Telephone: (203) 974-8601 Fax: (203) 974-8502
Email: Sharon.Douglas@ct.gov

Excess water can be a serious problem for many woody ornamentals. Roots in flooded or waterlogged soils are damaged and die from oxygen deficiency. In addition to this direct damage to the root system, flooding has also been associated with inciting physiological changes in woody plants that influence their growth and other processes. The feeder roots, which are nonwoody and important for uptake of water and nutrients from the soil, are particularly sensitive and are frequently the first ones damaged by waterlogging. Woody roots are more tolerant than nonwoody roots to flooding. When feeder roots are damaged, they are unable to provide water to the top of the plant and a water deficit develops. Damage can be sudden or gradual, depending on the plant and the flooding conditions. This can occur on plants in obviously wet sites and on those in marginal sites or soils with more subtle water problems such as along city streets or in areas where high clay content in the soil impedes drainage. Most trees and woody shrubs cannot grow in waterlogged soils for very long and can die if flooded for only a few days during the growing season. Visible symptoms are often not evident until considerably after the damage has occurred, especially when the root damage is gradual.

SYMPTOMS:
Symptoms of excess water depend upon the plant and are highly variable. These include epinasty (downward rolling of leaves), stem swelling, chlorosis or yellowing of the foliage, oedema, reduced and stunted growth, twig dieback, leaf drop, root death and, in extreme cases, whole plant death.

Seedlings and new transplants are more sensitive to excess water problems than are established plants. This can be attributed to the lack of an established root system and to feeder root damage during transplanting. Needled evergreens are generally considered more sensitive to waterlogged soils than broadleaved, deciduous plants. Symptoms of waterlogging may not develop in a woody ornamental until water demands on the root system increase, typically during the hot summer months when the canopy is actively losing water through transpiration. This is sometimes exhibited as a sudden collapse of the tree or shrub. Other trees appear to lose vigor and slowly decline over a period of years. This can occur on trees that have been otherwise "healthy" for 10-15 years, but are growing in poor sites or heavy soils. Dormant plants generally appear to tolerate flooding longer than those in active growth. In addition to direct root damage, trees in flooded soils are predisposed to secondary pathogens and other opportunistic pests such as the fungal root rots caused by Phytophthora and Armillaria.

MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES:
Strategies for minimizing wet soil problems include: 1) selection of an appropriate site and use of proper planting practices; 2) cultural practices that maintain plant vigor and stimulate growth; 3) selection of appropriate species for soil and site conditions: water-tolerant (red maple, larch, green ash) versus water-intolerant (crabapple, spruce, hemlock, yew, white pine); and 4) pruning dead or dying tissues to minimize secondary invaders and opportunistic pests.

Summary

Excess water results in root death due to an oxygen deficiency that develops in flooded or waterlogged soils. In addition to direct root damage, flooding is also associated with physiological changes in woody plants that influence growth and other processes. Symptoms and methods to minimize the impact of excess water are discussed.