Did Winter Kill My Trees?
Trees and shrubs that died over winter are quite obvious now. Most
other vegetation is covered with green foliage, while winter killed
material is stark or has small tufts of leaves scattered throughout
the plant. Advice in the spring would
be to give the plant time to recover. By now, plants should have developed
some new leaves if the plant had any chance of recovery. The Plant Clinic
has received many complaints
of trees and shrubs that did not survive. What factor or factors
caused the death of so many trees and shrubs this winter?
The usual complaint we hear is that the tree or shrub looked fine in
the fall and was dead this spring. If that were the case, the logical
assumption is that winter injury is the culprit. Freeze injury during
dormancy is one possibility. Another possibility is the injury that
occurs following a sudden drop in temperatures in the fall. Cold acclimation
usually occurs as temperatures fall. If temperatures fall rapidly (overnight),
however, plant tissue is often injured. Cold damage can also occur in
the spring when there is a cold snap just as tissues begin to expand.
In that case, plants have begun deacclimation and are more susceptible
to cold temperatures. Authors Sinclair, Lyon and Johnson, in Diseases
of Trees and Shrubs, discuss these possibilities. Although individual
cases of cold injury occurred, the general temperature conditions of
the past winter in Illinois do not seem to account for the number of
winter fatalities of trees and shrubs. Besides, we would expect all
similar species in an area to be affected if cold injury were the only
factor. That was not the case.
It is possible that the plants that supposedly looked fine last fall
were already under stress. Drought stress is a likely key player in
Illinois. Acute drought stress is obvious to most gardeners because
plants wilt during the day and rehydrate at night. Symptoms are sudden
and easy to see. A slow, continual lack of water as experienced last
summer and fall, on the other hand, causes a reduced growth rate, reduced
leaf size, off-color foliage and stem dieback. These symptoms might
not be obvious because they happen slowly over the season. We saw these
symptoms on many plants last year, especially white pine, birch and
lindens. In many cases, frequent, shallow irrigation kept trees alive
but also caused shallow root development. Trees with a shallow root
system are not able to withstand more drought stress as readily as trees
with deeper roots. The past winter was dry for most of Illinois; and
winds are thought to have been a factor in the final desiccation of
already drought-stressed trees.
Illinois has fared well with frequent rains. When drought hits again,
help your trees by watering deeply on a weekly basis as long as drought
occurs. Watering turf around the trees is usually not adequate for tree
needs. A long, slow soak in the drip line is helpful, as are hose end
root injections tools. Check tree books to determine the relative water
needs of your tree. Birch, for instance, requires more water than most
other trees, so it shows deficit more quickly. Most tree feeder roots
are in the top 18 inches of soil. When watering the roots via the soil
surface, apply at least an inch of water in each watering. If you use
a soil injector, put the injector into the soil to about 18 inches.
Injectors give a slower release of the water, but it is deeper into
the soil with less loss to evaporation and surrounding turf. A disadvantage
to injectors is that you can’t be certain how much water you are
applying.
Source: Author: Nancy Pataky, University of Illinois Extension
Summer 2003
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