Dr. Phyto

centipede grass

Eremochloa ophiuroides

Diseases & pests on this plant

  • sheath blightRhizoctonia solani
  • Thatch accumulation (lawn)Lawn thatch accumulation

    The lawn feels soft, spongy and bouncy underfoot, and a thick brown layer of dead stems and roots can be seen between the green leaves and the soil when you part the grass. The turf dries out quickly, water runs off or sits on top, and the grass becomes thin, pale and prone to scalping and disease.

  • Nitrogen deficiency (lawn)Lawn nitrogen deficiency

    The whole lawn fades to a uniform pale green or yellow, oldest leaves first, and grows slowly with little need for mowing. The turf looks thin and lacklustre, clover and weeds (which fix their own nitrogen) often stand out greener than the grass around them.

  • Pythium root rotPythium aphanidermatum

    Yellowing + wilting leaves despite wet soil (the diagnostic combination), brown mushy roots when plant is unpotted, foul earthy smell from rotting roots, plant easily pulled from pot with most root system left behind in mix, stem base softening + black at soil line in severe cases.

  • Scalping injury (lawn)Lawn scalping injury

    Pale brown, almost bald strips and patches appear immediately after mowing, exposing stems and bare soil where the mower cut into high spots, bumps or slopes. The damage follows the contours of the ground and the mowing pattern, and often shows brown crowns and stubble rather than green leaf.

  • Drought dormancy (lawn)Lawn drought dormancy

    Large, irregular areas of the lawn turn uniformly straw-yellow to tan during hot, dry spells, usually starting on the sunniest, most exposed parts and over sandy or shallow soil. Footprints stay visibly pressed in (loss of springiness), but the crowns at the base of the plants remain alive and the grass greens up again after rain.

  • Soil compaction (lawn)Lawn soil compaction

    Grass grows thin, weak and pale along paths, gateways, play areas and other heavily walked routes, with hard ground that is difficult to push a fork into. Water puddles on the surface after rain instead of soaking in, and moss and weeds often move into the worn lines.

  • fall armywormSpodoptera frugiperdaEU-notifiable quarantine organism

    Young caterpillars skeletonise leaves and make "windowpane" patches; older ones chew ragged holes and burrow into the whorl, tassel and cobs of maize, leaving copious moist sawdust-like frass; the caterpillar has a pale inverted "Y" on the head and four dark spots in a square on the second-to-last segment. Populations build explosively and "march" between crops.

  • dollar spot (lawn disease)Clarireedia jacksonii

    Small, round, straw-coloured sunken spots about the size of a coin (2–6 cm) that can merge into larger bleached patches; individual grass blades show a light tan lesion with a darker reddish-brown band right across the leaf; in early morning dew a fine white cobwebby mycelium can be seen. Most common on fine turf in warm days with cool dewy nights.

  • Fairy ringMarasmius oreades

    Arcs or complete rings, from under a metre to many metres across, of dark-green, fast-growing grass, often with a band of dead or thinned turf just inside, and small tan mushrooms appearing after rain. In dry weather the ring zone becomes hydrophobic (water-repellent) so the grass there wilts and browns even when surrounding turf is green; a mushroom smell and white fungal threads are found in the thatch and soil.

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