Mango Leaves Diseases Causes and Treatment

by Sadabahar Greens Pvt. Ltd.

Mango Leaves Disease

Mango-tree-Tip-Burn-Urban-PlantsThe leaves of a healthy mango plant are a deep, vibrant green colored, and discolored leaves usually indicate some problem. When your mango leaves are burnt on the tips, it’s because of a disease called tipburn. Tipburn of mango leaves can be caused by several different issues, but, fortunately, not anyone is difficult to treat. Read on for information on tipburn and its treatment of tipburn. 

Causes Mango Tipburn

When you inspect your mango tree and find mango leaves with burnt tips, the plant is probably suffering from a physiological disease called tipburn. The primary symptom of tipburn of mango tree leaves is necrotic sections around the leaf edges. If your mango leaf tips are burnt, you may ask what causes mango tipburn. It is important to figure out the cause of the condition in order to begin appropriate treatment of tipburn. 
Tipburn of mango plant leaves is often, though not always, caused by one of two conditions. Either the mango plant is not getting enough water or else salt has accumulated in the soil. Both can occur at the same time, but either one can result in mango tree leaves with burnt tips. 
If you water your plant regularly, you are not likely to see tipburn of mango plant leaves caused by a moisture deficiency. Usually, sporadic irrigation or extreme fluctuations in soil moisture is the kind of cultural plant care that results in tipburn. 
An even more likely cause is salt accumulation in the soil. If your plant’s drainage is poor, salt can build up in the soil, causing tipburn of mango leaves. A magnesium deficiency is yet another possible cause of this problem. 

Treatment of Mango Tipburn 

Mango-tree-Tip-Burn-Urban-PlantsThe best mango tipburn treatment for your mango plant depends on what is causing the issue. Tipburn caused by fluctuations in moisture can be solved by regularizing mango irrigation. Set a schedule for watering your mango plant and stick to it. 

If salt has built up in the soil, try heavy watering to flush salts out from the mango root zone. If your mango plant’s soil has drainage issues, replace the soil with well-draining soil and be sure any containers have many drainage holes to allow water to run out smoothly after irrigation. To treat magnesium deficiency diseases, use a foliar spray of KCl 2%. Repeat every two weeks.

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