At a glance
- Leaves rolling tightly with dry soil: Drought stress; water deeply immediately
- Leaves near tassel curling with gray-green aphid mass: Corn leaf aphids; treat with insecticidal soap
- Leaves streaked with yellow-green wavy bands: Stewart's wilt; remove infected plants, plant resistant varieties
- Long tan cigar-shaped lesions on leaves: Northern corn leaf blight; improve air circulation, use resistant varieties
- Leaves rolling in afternoon heat but recovering overnight: Heat stress; water consistently through silking and pollination
Why corn leaves curl
Corn (Zea mays) is one of the most water-demanding common vegetable crops. Its long, broad leaves are designed to maximize photosynthesis in full sun but also lose water rapidly through transpiration. When the water supply is inadequate, corn leaves roll into tight cylinders to reduce exposed surface area — a response so consistent and visible that it serves as a practical field indicator of crop water stress. This drought-induced leaf rolling is by far the most common reason home gardeners see curled corn leaves. Understanding the difference between drought roll, pest damage, and disease is important because the interventions are entirely different: drought responds to water; bacterial wilt does not.
Cause 1: Drought stress
Signs: The leaves are rolling inward along their length into tight cylinders. The soil is dry. The rolling is most pronounced in the afternoon during peak heat. The plants recover and leaves unroll by the following morning. All or most plants in the planting are affected simultaneously. The tassel or silks may be emerging at the same time, which is the critical period when drought most affects yield.
Why it happens: Corn needs consistent moisture throughout the growing season, with the highest demands during the two weeks surrounding silking and pollination. During this period, drought stress of even a few days can cause silk desiccation and poor pollen reception, resulting in incomplete kernel fill on the cob. Outside of this critical window, corn can tolerate short dry periods better, but the leaf rolling is always a signal that roots cannot keep up with atmospheric water demand.
Fix: Water immediately and deeply, targeting the root zone. Corn in garden beds needs 1 to 2 inches of water per week, more during silking. Apply a 3 to 4 inch layer of mulch around the base of plants to retain soil moisture and reduce soil temperature. Drip irrigation or soaker hoses deliver water efficiently at the root zone. If leaf rolling is severe or plants are not recovering overnight, increase watering frequency and depth.
Cause 2: Corn leaf aphids
Signs: Large colonies of aphids are visible on the undersides of leaves near the top of the plant and around the developing tassel. The affected leaves may be curling, and a gray-green mass of aphid bodies gives the tissue a dusty or dirty appearance. A sticky, shiny honeydew residue coats the lower leaves. Ants are climbing the stalks.
Why it happens: The corn leaf aphid (Rhopalosiphum maidis) is a specific aphid species that colonizes the upper portions of corn plants, particularly around the tassel. Large infestations can reduce plant vigor and, importantly, vector barley yellow dwarf virus to corn. In home gardens, aphid populations are often held in check by natural predators such as parasitic wasps and ladybugs; large infestations that cause curling typically indicate a disruption to the natural predator population.
Fix: For moderate infestations, a strong blast of water dislodges aphid colonies and is often sufficient. Apply insecticidal soap to the tassel area and upper leaf surfaces if the infestation is heavy. Avoid broad-spectrum insecticides, which also kill the parasitic wasps that are the most effective long-term control. In most years, natural predators catch up with aphid populations within 2 to 3 weeks without chemical intervention.
Cause 3: Stewart's wilt
Signs: Long, irregular, pale green or yellow streaks run parallel to the leaf veins. The streaks have wavy edges and the tissue between them may curl slightly. Young plants in the seedling stage may wilt rapidly and die. Older plants develop the leaf streaking alongside a general reduction in vigor. The problem is more severe following mild winters when corn flea beetle populations are high.
Why it happens: Stewart's wilt is a bacterial disease caused by Pantoea stewartii and spread by the corn flea beetle. The seedling wilt phase (spread by beetles feeding on very young plants) can kill infected seedlings; the leaf blight phase on more established plants causes streaking and curl but is less lethal. The disease's prevalence correlates directly with winter temperatures: a common risk index sums the average temperatures of December, January, and February, with sums above 90 indicating high risk for the coming season.
What to do: Remove and destroy severely infected plants. Plant Stewart's wilt-resistant sweet corn hybrids in areas where flea beetle pressure is historically high. Control corn flea beetles with appropriate insecticides applied early in the season when the beetles are actively feeding on young plants, reducing bacterial transmission.
Cause 4: Northern corn leaf blight
Signs: Long, tan or gray-green, cigar-shaped lesions appear on the leaves, typically 1 to 6 inches long with distinct borders. The lesions may have a dark green or water-soaked appearance initially, then turn tan as they age. The affected portion of the leaf curls or dies as the lesion expands. Multiple lesions on a single leaf can cause significant leaf area loss.
Why it happens: Northern corn leaf blight (NCLB) is caused by the fungus Exserohilum turcicum and is favored by moderate temperatures and humid, wet conditions. Spores spread via wind and rain splash. The disease overwinters on infected crop debris, making it more prevalent in continuous corn rotations without tillage.
Fix: In small home gardens, remove and destroy heavily affected leaves. Plant NCLB-resistant corn varieties, which are widely available. Avoid overhead irrigation and improve plant spacing to reduce canopy humidity. Rotate corn with other crops rather than planting corn in the same location every year. Fungicide applications are cost-effective in commercial production but rarely justified in small home gardens.
Cause 5: Heat stress during pollination
Signs: Leaves are rolling during the hottest part of the day and the silks are emerging at the same time. Temperatures have been above 95 degrees Fahrenheit. The silk may appear to dry out or brown before adequate pollination occurs. Kernel fill on the resulting cobs is poor or patchy.
Why it happens: Corn pollen is viable for only a few hours and is damaged by temperatures above 95 degrees Fahrenheit. When a heat wave coincides with the pollination window (silking), kernel set can be severely reduced even if the plants appear to recover from the heat stress. The leaf rolling during this period is both a drought response and a heat protection mechanism.
Fix: Water consistently and heavily during silking. Hand pollination (shaking the tassel over the silks in early morning when it is cooler) can supplement natural pollination during extreme heat. Plant corn at the appropriate time for your climate to avoid the main heat period coinciding with silking. In very hot climates, choosing heat-tolerant varieties reduces but does not eliminate heat damage during pollination.