Identifying and Treating Common Diseases of Beach Morning Glory Plants

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Robby

Common Names: railroad vine, bayhops, beach morning-glory, seaside yam, goats foot, goats foot morning-glory, goats foot creeper

Origin: pantropical, including Florida and tropical and subtropical Americas, Africa, Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands

With their vibrant flowers and ability to thrive in coastal environments, beach morning glory plants are a favorite for many gardeners. However, these plants can suffer from diseases just like any other plant. Properly identifying and treating issues is key to maintaining the health and beauty of beach morning glories. In this article, we’ll explore some of the most common beach morning glory diseases, how to spot them, and effective treatment methods.

An Overview of Beach Morning Glories

Also known as Ipomoea pes-caprae, beach morning glory is a species of morning glory native to tropical regions. These herbaceous vines are perfectly adapted to grow in the harsh conditions of sandy beaches and coastal areas. They produce colorful trumpet-shaped flowers, usually in shades of pink, purple, or white. Fast-growing and tolerant of heat, beach morning glories are ideal trailing vines for gardens in warm climates near oceans or seas.

Powdery Mildew

A common fungal disease, powdery mildew is one of the top problems of beach morning glories It manifests as a white powdery coating on leaves, stems, and flowers. While not necessarily fatal, powdery mildew can stunt growth and affect the plant’s appearance

Identifying Powdery Mildew

Look for these signs to spot powdery mildew:

  • White or gray powdery substance on foliage and flowers
  • Leaves may become twisted, curled, or distorted
  • Stunted growth

Powdery mildew thrives in warm, humid conditions with poor air circulation. Crowded plants and excessive moisture promote problems.

Treating Powdery Mildew

  • Improve airflow by spacing plants properly and pruning dense growth
  • Apply sulfur-based fungicides labeled for powdery mildew
  • Water in the morning to allow foliage to dry out during the day
  • Remove and destroy severely infected plant material

Caught early, powdery mildew can often be controlled with some adjustments to care and without chemicals. But don’t allow it to spread.

Leaf Spot

Leaf spot fungal diseases are common in beach morning glories causing unsightly lesions on leaves. Spots begin small and round but can expand killing leaf tissue.

Identifying Leaf Spot

Watch for these leaf spot signs:

  • Small dark brown or black spots on leaves
  • Lesions may be surrounded by yellowing halos
  • Spots enlarge and merge as disease progresses
  • Severe cases lead to yellowing, wilting, and leaf drop

Like powdery mildew, leaf spot thrives in wet, humid conditions. Insufficient air circulation also encourages problems.

Treating Leaf Spot

  • Improve air flow and reduce moisture on leaves
  • Remove and destroy infected foliage
  • Apply fungicides containing chlorothalonil, mancozeb, or copper
  • Space plants properly to allow circulation
  • Avoid overhead watering

Prompt removal of affected leaves is important to prevent spreading. Fungicides may be needed for moderate or severe cases.

Root Rot

Excess moisture leads to root rot, a common and serious threat for beach morning glories. Fungal pathogens infect the roots, causing them to turn brown and mushy. The disease eventually spreads through the entire plant, leading to death.

Identifying Root Rot

Watch for these key signs of root rot:

  • Sudden wilting and drooping, even when soil is moist
  • Leaves turn yellow and drop
  • Roots are brown, slimy, or disintegrating
  • Stems near soil line appear constricted or rotted
  • Damaged plants pull up easily from soil

Treating Root Rot

  • Improve drainage in planting beds
  • Allow soil to dry adequately between waterings
  • Remove and discard any infected plants
  • Apply fungicides containing fluoxastrobin, metalaxyl, or phosphites
  • Solarize soil to kill fungal pathogens before replanting

Once plants are infected, root rot is difficult to cure. Prevention with proper cultural practices is key.

Virus Diseases

Viruses transmitted by insects and contaminated tools can also impact beach morning glories. These include mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus, and tobacco mosaic virus.

Identifying Virus Diseases

Look for these virus symptoms:

  • Mottled, mosaic leaf patterns in shades of yellow, white, and green
  • Leaves may be distorted, puckered, or wrinkled
  • Plant stunting and reduced flowering
  • Spread of symptoms through entire plant

Aphids, whiteflies, and leafhoppers spread viral diseases. Damage from tools can also introduce problems.

Treating Virus Diseases

  • Remove and destroy infected plants immediately to prevent spread
  • Control insects like aphids that transmit viruses
  • Sterilize gardening tools with diluted bleach solution
  • Do not touch or move plants when wet to avoid spread

There are no chemical treatments for viruses. Thorough control measures and removal are essential.

Other Important Tips

  • Inspect plants frequently for early disease detection
  • Disinfect tools after use on diseased plants
  • Stake plants and avoid crowding to encourage airflow
  • Water at the soil line, not from overhead
  • Apply appropriate fungicides at first sign of disease

Quick identification and prompt, thorough treatment will keep your beach morning glories thriving despite inevitable disease issues. Know the common problems to look for, and act decisively to maintain the beauty and vigor of these coastal vines. With proper care and disease management, your beach morning glories will continue flourishing all season long.

common beach morning glory plant diseases how to identify and treat

Uses, Planting, and Maintenance Guidelines

Being native to dunes and beaches, railroad vine can tolerate intense heat, full sun, and poor soils, but it requires excellent drainage. It is used to stabilize beaches and dunes but may also be cultivated as an inland groundcover.

In south Florida, plant cuttings from March through October to form a groundcover on beaches, dunes, and landscapes. Railroad vine may be used on slopes up to 20°, and on steeper slopes if stable. Space small plants 2 to 3 feet apart, and 3 to 5 feet apart for larger plants. Plant with the top of the root ball slightly below the soils surface. Irrigate at the time of planting and for several weeks thereafter unless there is regular rainfall. Providing regular water and controlling weeds will speed establishment of new plantings. For faster and denser coverage, redirect errant stems back into the growing area. Dense coverage is possible in two to three years on moist well-drained soil.

If inundated with salt water even for a short time, the aboveground portion will die back but typically regrow from the roots. However, long periods of saltwater inundation may kill the entire plant. Strong offshore wind may temporarily damage plants on beaches and dunes, causing scorched leaves and stems.

Ornamental groundcover plantings of railroad vine generally do not last for more than eight years. Insects, diseases, and improper management may hasten their decline. In the worst of landscape conditions, railroad vine longevity may not exceed a year. For best growth as a groundcover, the soil must be free-draining and irrigation kept to a minimum once the plants are established. Provide plenty of space and avoid interplanting with other small, low-growing species. Otherwise, fast-growing railroad vine is likely to overgrow smaller plants and require frequent pruning to keep it in bounds. In the landscape, railroad vine can tolerate occasional pruning, which encourages more branching. It does not tolerate shade and is easily out-competed by large plants that exclude light. In the drier winter and spring months, the plants may appear scraggly, but they will quickly recover at the start of the rainy season.

Geographic Distribution and Habit

Railroad vine is one of the most widely distributed beach plants in the world. Its exact native range is obscure, but railroad vine is now found in subtropical and tropical zones worldwide, including the West Indies, the Americas, Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Pacific Islands. In the United States, it occurs along the Atlantic coast of Georgia and Florida, and along the Gulf coast from Florida to Texas. It is primarily found in coastal habitats, especially dunes and beaches, and is rarely found inland. The moving sand and salt spray make the beach environment a harsh one, and the plants that live there are specialized to colonize that environment.

This is a tap-rooted, herbaceous, creeping (rarely twining), perennial vine that produces a milky latex when broken. It grows rapidly and usually does not form a dense cover on Floridas beaches. The common name “railroad vine” refers to its tendency to form “tracks” of horizontal stems more than 100 feet long.

The stems are succulent, becoming tough and fibrous with age. Nodes are mostly 3 to 7 inches apart. Adventitious roots often form at the nodes, helping to anchor the vine. Stems are typically horizontal, but when the plant encounters something to climb upon, they may occasionally twine upward. Plants usually are between 6 to 16 inches in height.

The leaves are simple, alternately arranged, dark green, rather leathery, and glabrous (hairless). Leaf shape is quite variable in this species but is typically ovate (egg-shaped), orbicular (circular), or oblong (parallel-sided). The leaf base is truncate to shallowly cordate (heart-shaped), and the apex is usually notched to deeply cleft, but sometimes rounded or truncate. The epithet pes-caprae is Latin for “goats foot,” referring to the notched leaf apex (resembling the cloven hoof of a goat). The leaf blades are usually 3.0 to 4.75 inches long and 3.5 to 6.0 inches wide, and they are often folded upward from the midrib. The veins on the leaf blades are pinnate and finely reticulate (net-like), typically more visible on the leaf undersides than on the upper surface. The petioles (leaf stalks) vary in length ranging from 1 to 6 inches. On young leaves, the petioles are commonly reddish in color, becoming yellowish-green as they age. There is a pair of nectar-producing glands on the underside of each leaf blade at its juncture with the petiole. These nectaries are red on new leaves, turning black with age, and attract ants, which defend the plant against herbivorous insects.

Flowers may be produced year-round but are most abundant during the warmer months (from spring to fall), and less common in winter. Each flower lasts only one day, opening at sunrise and closing by early afternoon on sunny days. On cloudy days, flowers often open and close later. Railroad vine is an obligate out-crosser, meaning the flowers are self-incompatible (self-pollinated flowers result in very few or no fruit). Insects attracted to the large nectaries of the showy flowers assist in cross-pollination. The primary pollinators are bees, but butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, wasps, and ants may also visit the flowers.

Flowers are borne in one-to-several-flowered cymes in the leaf axils. They are upright and funnel-shaped, consisting of five fused petals, often with notches along the edges at the juncture between adjacent petals. Flower color varies from pale pink to lavender to reddish purple (very rarely white), typically with a darker rose-purple throat radiating as bands up the midline of each petal, which serves as a nectar guide for pollinating insects. Corollas usually measure about 1.5 to 2.5 inches long and wide, and are borne on pedicels 1 to 2 inches long. The sepals are leathery, hairless, and unequal—the outer two shorter and ovate to elliptic and the inner three longer, almost circular in shape, with a rounded apex ended in a very small abrupt point (mucro).

The fruit are ovoid to flattened-globose, dehiscent capsules, usually measuring 0.5 to 0.75 inches long and wide. Capsules are borne on elongated pedicels with a persistent calyx. They are green and smooth when immature splitting into four valves at maturity. Opened capsules are leathery, brown on the exterior, and beige on the inside, becoming more brittle and gray with age. Each valve holds a single seed, which is rounded to trigonous (three-sided), covered with dense, velvety hairs, and 0.25 to 0.35 inches long. The seeds, sometimes referred to as seabeans or drift seeds, are adapted for dispersal on ocean currents and are sometimes collected after washing up on beaches.

Railroad vine is propagated by stem cuttings, seed, and tissue culture. Cuttings are generally faster and easier, and they have a higher transplant survival rate than plants produced from seed. Cuttings should be planted directly into a well-drained substrate with at least one node buried. Cuttings usually root within 7 to 10 days when grown under mist. To avoid rotting, cuttings should be removed from the mist to harden off as soon as they are rooted and may be transplanted to individual pots when roots are sufficiently developed. Gardeners can place cuttings to root in pots or directly into the ground and hand-water them until roots are well-developed. Seeds must be abraded or scarified before they will germinate. In the wild in Florida, seeds germinate much of the year except in winter.

Identifying and Treating Common Plant Diseases

FAQ

What is the fungus on my morning glories?

Cercospora and Alternaria are the usual suspects behind black spots on Morning Glory leaves. These fungal foes launch their assault with spots that can range from small specks to larger lesions. They’re not just a cosmetic issue; they can lead to serious leaf damage if left unchecked.

How to save a dying morning glory plant?

Insufficient sunlight can be a cause of yellowing leaves, as morning glories require full sun to flourish. To remedy this, you can transplant your morning glory to a sunnier spot in the garden or trim any plants that are blocking the sun. Another cause of yellow leaves is either under-watering or over-watering.

What is wrong with my morning glory plant?

Morning Glories are sun-lovers, but too much of a good thing can lead to leaf scorch. Crispy patches on leaves are like a distress flare, signaling an urgent need for shade. If your blooms are sporting a crunchy look, it’s time to reassess their sunbathing habits.

How do I know what disease my plant has?

Disease Symptoms: What To Watch For When disease attacks a plant, it’s easily visible. Growth slows, stunts or becomes spindly; leaves may yellow, show white powdery blotches or develop spots. Affected leaves eventually drop. Stems may become soft and mushy, with black tissue visible near the soil.

What is beach morning glory?

Beach morning glory is also called railroad vine due to its scrambling nature and ability to cover less used tracks and roadsides. It is adapted to coastal areas where sand is plentiful and the soil is well-draining. Salt, heat, and wind don’t bother this plant and it is common to see it splayed across a dune in coastal regions.

Are aphids bad for Morning Glory plants?

While not a disease per se, aphids are common pests that can infest morning glory plants and cause significant damage. These small insects feed on the sap of plants, causing stunted growth, distorted leaves, and yellowing foliage. They can also transmit viral diseases to the plants.

Is beach morning glory poisonous?

This plant has low severity poison characteristics. Beach morning-glory is a perennail vine in the Convolvulaceae (morning glory) family. It is native to the coastlines of tropical and subtropical areas across the globe where it is found sprawling along sandy beaches and dunes.

How to care for Morning Glory?

If the soil in your plant’s pot is completely dry, you will need to start by moistening it so that the roots will also benefit from the water. A common mistake is to drown the Morning glory right after a dry period thinking that it needs a lot of water.

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