Clematis Armandii

Discussion in 'Garden Pest Management and Identification' started by John Farrer, Oct 9, 2004.

  1. John Farrer

    John Farrer Member

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    Location:
    Sechelt BC
    Some of our clematis armandii leaves have gone like this. Is this an important problem, or is this just something that happens at this time of year?


    John
     

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  2. mr.shep

    mr.shep Well-Known Member 10 Years

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    Location:
    San Joaquin Valley, California
    Hi John:

    It may be better that someone located closer to you
    tries to help but I know what I would suspect if this
    plant were grown here.

    Give me some background on your soil and its type,
    what fertilizers or soil amendments you use and the
    last time you fertilized this plant. How widespread
    throughout the plant is the discoloration on the
    leaves? Were the black discolored areas in the
    leaves first seen before the burned tips and the other
    deadened areas were evident? Were the leaves
    exposed to long periods of hot, direct sunlight and
    were the leaves wet when they were exposed to the
    sunlight? How old is the plant and how long has it
    been planted in the ground or is it grown in a
    container? Are the leaves some of the older leaves
    on the plant? Just me being curious, what variety is
    this Clematis such as Snowdrift, Apple Blossom or
    Hendersonii Rubra?

    What I see does not appear to be your worst fear and
    that is Clematis Wilt. Do you have any Camellias or
    in the last few years newly brought in Rhododendrons
    or Azaleas growing near this Clematis? What do the
    underside of the leaves look like? What I would like
    to know if there are any soft tissue ruptures on the
    underside of the leaves also.

    < Is this an important problem, or is this just something
    that happens at this time of year? >

    Just to ease your mind a little, a multi-nutrient deficiency
    can cause the cellular tissue ruptures that I am seeing. It
    is quite common with Sasanqua Camellias when our soil
    mediums have had most of the nutrients depleted or have
    been leached out. The speckling on the leaves for Camellias
    and the evergreen Clematis is also an indication that there
    is not enough Oxygen movement in the soil. Important
    problem, could be but I am not going there yet. Yes, this
    condition is common with the evergreen Clematis we've
    grown here. For us, it was the older leaves on the plant
    that would do this to us.

    Jim
     
  3. growest

    growest Active Member 10 Years

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    Location:
    Surrey,BC,Canada
    common problem

    John, Jim and all--this is a common but still somewhat mysterious complaint with armandii here in the Vancouver, BC area.

    I have over 100 in 1 gal. containers, many of which are suffering varying amounts of leaf browning. Many of those in the most sun exposed areas are looking the best, so trying to figure out a cause is difficult for me. I do assume that this is a type of wilting where the plant is unable or unwilling to supply enough water to the extreme leaf tips and sometimes entire shoots, which wind up browning off and dying.

    I depotted one of my worst examples, and did find the plant very potbound. This probably doesn't directly answer John's question, since his is most likely planted out in the ground. Still, there could be some water shortage after our hot, dry summer, esp. up under the eaves of a house.

    Also any fertilizing could cause, or worsen, the situation. I don't know when I'm going to learn my lesson that too little fertilizer is much better than too much...in this case i did give the armandii's a good dose of liquid fish before the leaf browning showed up here. Similar "scorch" on some 2 gal. rhodos nearby is more like "sunburn", but would have been related to the high salt content of the fish combined with the hot sunny spells with low humidity that we enjoyed but most of our broadleaved evergreens did not.

    That all said, I continue to be mystified by many massive armandii's growing in peoples yards here with no sign of a problem, while others struggle and show considerable dieback/leaf browning. Wish I knew a few more tricks with this plant!

    Glen
     
  4. mr.shep

    mr.shep Well-Known Member 10 Years

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    Location:
    San Joaquin Valley, California
    Hi Glen:

    Just a few quick comments: Bear in mind that
    what happens to us here may not occur elsewhere.
    There is a great deal of variance in how plants
    behave in Canada and the Pacific Northwest
    as opposed to the drier and warmer areas of
    California. What we perceive as an issue here
    may be thought of as being normal or naturally
    occurring in another area until something shows
    up to cause concern in those other areas.

    The ruptures I am seeing on the leaves of John's
    plant is usually attributed to Calcium deficiency
    on Clematis Armandii. When I refer to fertilizers
    or fertilizing I am not always referring to applications
    of Nitrogen. We found that low Nitrogen levels
    worked best for us. Yes, high salt content can cause
    the tips to burn, so can an overload of Magnesium.
    Nitrogen burning acts a little differently on Armandii
    than what we are seeing from John's plant.

    Armandii grown in the ground as opposed to them
    growing in containers can be a marked difference in
    how the plants behave. Grown in a saran house in
    50% shade with overhead sprinklers we would see
    tip burning if the leaves were wet and then exposed
    to hot, direct sun or hot winds. Margin burning is not
    nearly as common as tip burning for us with out heat
    and low humidity here. Splotch burning tells me
    something else such as Calcium and Manganese
    deficiency as well as possible Magnesium toxicity
    which can come about as a result of certain fish
    emulsions applied to saline and alkaline soils. What
    I am more interested in knowing is the soil, its type
    and how compacted it may be. I know that it may
    seem hard for people to understand but we do get
    compaction of another sort with plants grown in
    containers in that what we see of the soil appears
    okay and the water holding capacity seems good but
    there is no air movement in the roots from the soil
    particles coalescing to the point that we have a
    compacted soil without an actual compaction.
    Compaction generally refers to a layer of soil that
    becomes hardened in which water cannot penetrate
    through it very easily. That is essentially what our
    hard pan layer is like here and our layers may be
    1-2 feet thick. I've even witnessed land dynamited
    just to break the hard pan layer as a D9 with a 5 foot,
    3-prong ripper shanks could not break the compacted
    clay pan layer. Even with container grown plants we
    may experience soil that holds water fine but because
    there is so little air movement in the soil that the soil
    actually does become compacted in another sense
    (super saturated) to the point that no air movement
    is occurring even after the soil becomes dry. Compacted
    soil to me means little or no Oxygen movement at all.
    The roots in effect suffocate due to no free Oxygen for
    them to breathe in. The above happens a lot with
    container grown Camellias when the soil is starting to
    break down on us and we've seen it with Clematis
    Armandii also that have plenty of silt in the potting
    medium but little organic matter to enable air pockets
    in the soil. When we repotted the plants and added in
    lots of humus into our soil mix we no longer experienced
    the topographical tissue ruptures we were seeing on the
    cuticle of both the Camellias and the Clematis. The
    endodermic discoloration is what bothers me in John's
    plant as that condition will not be immediately cured by
    adding in lots of organic matter into the soil mix. That
    is something else. Technically, John's condition is not
    a Wilt as John's plant would be dead at this point in time.
    Clematis Wilt acts very fast, one day the plant looks
    sickly and in a week it is deader than a doornail. I've
    never seen Clematis Wilt here but I have seen it in wetter
    and less warm climates than ours and with plants grown
    more so in acid soils as opposed to saline or alkaline soil
    conditions.

    As far as your condition on the one gallons you may
    want to post some pics of them. I would be more
    interested to see if the symptoms I am seeing on
    John’s leaves and the leaves of your Armandii are
    similar, yet different. Pot bound plants also do not
    have Oxygen to breathe. What generally happens to
    pot bound plants that have not rooted in, in some way,
    into the soil?

    Serious dieback after advanced stages of leaf browning
    may be something quite other than what John’s plant is
    or will be experiencing.

    Jim

    One last word:

    I have seen a form of Phytophthora cause similar,
    yet different leaf effects to Clematis Armandii, sans
    the ruptures, that are evident in John’s image on the
    cuticle. I’ve not seen it here though but I have seen
    it on Apple Blossom in a Plant Preservationist
    Conservatory in Northern California and elsewhere
    in the Pacific Northwest on Deciduous and Kurume
    Azaleas especially, as well as a host of Rhododendrons.
    I am no longer at liberty to discuss that pathogen issue
    in an open forum other than to say that tissue scarring
    does occur on the soft wood stems with advanced lesions
    showing up later on the hard wood. Left uncontrolled
    or untreated the above plants usually perish in two
    years after initially becoming infected.
     
  5. growest

    growest Active Member 10 Years

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    Location:
    Surrey,BC,Canada
    potbound problems

    Jim--I really appreciate your detailed responses backed up by real life experience. As a newbie in this biz, I feel I can only receive and not give much at this point.

    Your comments regarding calcium vs. magnesium, deficiencies and toxicities are very helpful. I've eliminated almost all use of dolomite and begun using high calcium lime, along with a raw (mined) humate product and a glacial dust that is easily available up here, for the bulk of my mineral supplement/"lime" inputs this year. I did hear of research in Scotland that found rhodos did better with high Mg and low Ca, but that was the only convincing info supporting extra Mg that I've run across.

    Low nitrogen is also noted, having seen this leaf damage following liquid fish application I will be much more careful. I did seem to find a top dress of bloodmeal on one block of plants did very well, compared to the others done with the fish...just my one season's experience here.

    I will be looking more carefully for evidence of the "compaction" problem now that I know it is possible in containers...slow growers like the camellia would certainly be more likely as they can be longer than a year in the same size container. I have a few small conifers like that...growing so slow they don't really need repotting unless the breakdown of the bark and compost makes for too dense a mixture...certainly makes sense.

    A digital camera is more and more desirable, I'm sure you'd have some comments if I could show the tip burn as well as a few short lengths of new growth that have browned/wilted. Phytophthora is unfortunately quite common on rhodo/azaleas and other evergreens here...no discoloration of roots to suspect that on the clematis, so far.

    Thanks again for your thoughts, Jim. Hopefully some of the other locals have some useful experiences on this...

    Glen
     
  6. mr.shep

    mr.shep Well-Known Member 10 Years

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    Location:
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    Hi Glen:

    A quick follow up.

    We had evidence of Calcium and Manganese deficiency
    showing on the leaves when we felt there was ample
    amounts of both nutrients in the soil. We did a soil test
    on the soil medium and a plant ash analysis on the leaves.
    What we learned did not surprise us, as we suspected it.
    We saw that we did indeed have ample amount of Calcium
    and Manganese in the soil and yet we were deficient in the
    leaves. By adding in more organic matter, for us forest
    humus, it was not long that the tied up, the better term is
    bound, Calcium and Manganese were then made much
    more readily available to the plant.

    The water mold forms of Phytophthora will always be a
    problem for us in wetter and cooler climates than here.
    It is a still relatively unknown blast form of Phytophthora
    is what I will not openly talk about any more. There are
    too many misconceptions with it and another non-water
    mold form of Phytophthora to suit me. I'll defer and wait
    until more people know more about both of them. One
    form is much more lethal on certain Azaleas and various
    forms (more so on native species) of Rhododendrons than
    the other form is however. The Apple Blossom at the
    Plant Conservatory (I did not name it) got hit in mid to
    late Summer. I saw it in the early Spring when in bloom
    and it was its last time for it to bloom as well. What a sight
    though as I had not ever seen an Evergreen Clematis that
    large. That one plant was over 100 feet long, pruned
    at 5' tall and made a lasting impression that no one would
    soon forget if they ever saw it in bloom. We took photos of
    it and of the stems and hard wood damage but what a lousy
    feeling we had for the 5+ hour drive home also. During the
    Summer they ordered 10 one gallon Apple Blossoms from
    us to replace it and plant elsewhere and ordered from us, the
    originating source nursery, 10 one gallon Hendersonii rubras.

    Jim
     
  7. chadsichello

    chadsichello Member

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    Location:
    Vancouver, BC Canada
    Re: common problem

    Hi Jim, Do you still have armandii at your nursery, if so, I'd like to purchase some, as well as armandii 'Apple Blossom' if you have them. Thanks and Best Regards, -chad
     

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