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Mineral Deficiencies and Toxicities

Evidence of lack or excess of certain minerals usually appears first in leaves but eventually affects fruit size, quality, or yield. Leaves may be pale to white or yellow, having chlorotic blotches along the veins or midribs. Leaves may also be mottled.

Solutions

Maintain a good fertilization and irrigation program. Make sure you apply the appropriate fertilizer at the right time. For oranges and grapefruit, apply nitrogen to the soil or foliage in late winter or early spring; lemons may receive nitrogen at any time of the year. Foliar applications of potassium and especially magnesium are most effective when the spring growth flush is two-thirds to three-fourths expanded. A leaf analysis may reveal toxic levels of certain minerals such as sodium, boron, or sulfur. An excess of these may be present in the soil naturally. Provide good soil drainage, and allow for extra irrigation to wash the salts below the root zone. Deficiencies can be corrected with chelated foliar sprays.

Iron-deficient foliage showing dark green veins and yellow-green interveinal areas. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Mottling of leaf due to manganese deficiency. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Magnesium deficient foliage showing wedge-shaped chlorosis, . Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Yellowing due to magnesium deficiency. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Zinc deficient foliage showing chlorotic areas between veins, . Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Chlorotic areas of zinc deficiency. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
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