Winter Injury and Drying of Rhododendron
PP055 (11/03R)
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@po.state.ct.us
Rhododendrons throughout Connecticut often exhibit symptoms
of winter injury and drying. Symptoms are present on shrubs of all ages and on
those growing in both wind-swept and sheltered locations. This type of injury is
a result of many environmental factors that often have little in common but that
they occur during the winter. The causal factors are very diverse and include
sudden temperature fluctuations, excessive or late season fertilization, lack of
snow cover, drying winds, and late spring frosts. The most common type of winter
injury on rhododendron is excessive drying. This results from factors that
create a water deficit in the shrub. This type of injury occurs when water
evaporates from the leaves on windy or warm, sunny days during the winter or
early spring. Drying occurs because this water is not replaced since the roots
cannot take up enough water from cold or frozen soil.
Winter injury is important in and of itself, but it also predisposes the shrubs
and renders them more vulnerable to secondary or opportunistic pests. Another
important characteristic of winter injury is that, quite often, the symptoms are
not evident until some time after the injury has occurred.
Symptoms may appear in early spring when growth is just beginning or they may
not appear until early summer or even later in the season. This can make
diagnosis difficult.
SYMPTOMS:
Symptoms of winter injury and drying can be varied, but are usually
characterized by tip or marginal browning of leaves, dieback of tips and
branches, desiccation of growing tips or twigs, and longitudinal rolling of
leaves along the midvein. Symptoms can develop on one or two individual branches
or on the entire shrub. This year, poor root health contributed to more
extensive and widespread damage than usual on many rhododendrons throughout
Connecticut. Particularly hard-hit were recently transplanted shrubs that lacked
well developed or established root systems and established shrubs of all sizes
and ages that had root systems that were predisposed and damaged by excess water
or drought.
MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES:
Obviously, we cannot control the weather, but there are steps we can
take that are aimed at minimizing the effects of winter injury. These include:
1) select the appropriate site for planting and maintain optimum growth by using
proper growing practices; 2) have sufficient moisture in the root zone before
the soil freezes—this can be accomplished by giving the shrubs a deep watering
before the ground freezes in the fall; mulching also helps to increase moisture
retention in the winter; 3) avoid late summer and early fall fertilization—this
stimulates and encourages growth late in the season that may not harden-off
properly for the winter; 4) prune and remove any dead twigs or branches that can
serve as sites for secondary invaders or opportunistic pests, and 5) provide
physical protection from water loss and drying winds—this is especially
important for new transplants or plants in exposed locations; burlap wraps and
sprays of anti-transpirants or anti-desiccants can be helpful.
Summary
The most common type of winter injury on rhododendron is
excessive drying. Symptoms are characterized by tip or marginal browning and
necrosis of leaves, longitudinal rolling of leaves along the midvein, dieback of
twigs and branches, and desiccation of growing tips or twigs. This fact sheet
discusses the causes and methods to minimize the damage associated with this
type of weather-related injury.