Gladiolus Leaves Curling

Why the leaves curl and how to get the flower spikes blooming strongly

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At a glance

  • Leaves with silver-gray streaking and flowers distorted or failing to open: Gladiolus thrips; treat with spinosad and treat corms before storage
  • Long leaves curling upward in hot, dry weather: Drought stress; water consistently during active growth
  • Light and dark green mosaic on leaves with color-break on flowers: Mosaic virus; discard plant and corm
  • Lower leaves yellowing and collapsing from the base: Fusarium corm rot; dig and inspect corms, discard infected ones
  • Emerging growing tip distorted and curled abnormally: Boron deficiency; apply borax solution to soil

Why gladiolus leaves curl

Gladiolus (Gladiolus hybrids and species) are summer-flowering corms grown for their tall, one-sided spikes of large, showy flowers in virtually every color. They are straightforward to grow but host a specific group of pest and disease problems that can significantly reduce flower quality and plant health. Thrips are the most important pest, causing damage both above and below ground and persisting in stored corms through winter. Distinguishing thrip damage from the more benign drought stress curl is the key first diagnostic step.

Cause 1: Gladiolus thrips

Signs: The leaves have fine silver-gray or white streaking on their surfaces, created by thrips rasping and feeding on the leaf cells. The flower buds may fail to open, or the opened flowers show silvery, water-soaked, or streaked petal discoloration. The insects themselves are tiny (1 to 2 mm), elongated, and yellowish-brown; they hide deep in the leaf sheaths and between the overlapping leaf bases, which is why they are often not spotted until damage is advanced. Shaking a flower or leaf over white paper may reveal the insects as moving specks.

Why it happens: Gladiolus thrips (Thrips simplex) are the most economically significant pest of gladiolus worldwide. They overwinter in the soil or on stored corms and become active as temperatures warm in spring and summer. They are highly mobile, spread on wind currents, and can infest a new gladiolus planting rapidly. The deep, overlapping leaf sheaths of gladiolus provide excellent shelter, making thrips on gladiolus harder to control than on plants with more open foliage.

Fix: Apply spinosad or insecticidal soap to all leaf surfaces, targeting the base of leaves and the growing point. Repeat every 5 to 7 days for 3 to 4 applications. For persistent infestations, use imidacloprid as a soil drench for systemic uptake. At season end, treat corms before storage: soak in insecticidal soap solution for 30 minutes, dry thoroughly, and dust with sulfur before storing. Rotate planting beds annually and avoid replanting gladiolus in the same location for 2 to 3 years.

Cause 2: Drought stress

Signs: The strap-like leaves are curling upward along their length during hot, dry weather. The soil is dry. The flower spike, if present, may be shorter and the flowers smaller than expected. The symptoms are most pronounced during heat waves and after gaps in irrigation. Young plants and those in sandy, fast-draining soil show these symptoms most readily.

Why it happens: Gladiolus grow rapidly during the summer months and need consistent soil moisture to develop the strong root system and flower spike that the corm's stored energy supports. Unlike many summer bulbs, gladiolus do not have a built-in drought tolerance; they need about 1 inch of water per week from rain or irrigation during the growing season. Shallow planting exposes the corm zone to faster drying in the top layer of soil, worsening drought stress effects.

Fix: Water consistently during the growing season, providing about 1 inch of water per week. Apply a 2 to 3 inch layer of mulch around the plants to retain moisture and reduce soil temperature fluctuations. Plant corms at a depth of 4 to 6 inches (larger corms deeper) to keep them in more consistently moist soil. In sandy soil, incorporate organic matter before planting to improve moisture retention. Avoid overhead watering, which can wet the foliage and promote disease; drip irrigation or soaker hoses are ideal.

Cause 3: Mosaic virus

Signs: The leaves show irregular light and dark green patterns (mosaic), streaking, or mottling. The emerging new leaves may be distorted or curled. The flowers may show color-breaking: streaks or blotches of a contrasting color appearing in normally uniform petals. The symptoms persist through the season and worsen. Aphids may be visible on the plants.

Why it happens: Bean yellow mosaic virus (BYMV) and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) are the most common viral pathogens of gladiolus. Both are transmitted by aphids in a non-persistent manner, meaning aphids pick up the virus quickly and can transmit it after brief probing on an infected plant. The virus becomes systemic in the entire plant including the corm, so infected corms produce infected plants in subsequent years.

What to do: Remove and destroy infected plants promptly. Do not save corms from plants showing mosaic or color-break symptoms; the virus persists in corm tissue. Control aphids on healthy gladiolus with insecticidal soap to reduce transmission. Purchase corms from certified virus-free sources. Do not propagate corms from plants with mosaic symptoms.

Cause 4: Fusarium corm rot

Signs: The lower leaves turn yellow and collapse beginning at the base of the plant, working upward. The plant may lean or fall over. Digging the corm reveals brown to reddish-brown rotted areas on or within the corm tissue. In wet conditions, the rot may progress rapidly. The problem is most common in wet, poorly draining soil or when corms are replanted in soil that had Fusarium the previous season.

Why it happens: Fusarium yellows is caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. gladioli, a soil-borne fungus that persists in soil for many years. It infects corms through wounds and natural openings, colonizing the vascular system and causing the characteristic basal yellowing and collapse. Wet, poorly draining soil and high soil temperatures favor the disease. Infected corms spread the fungus to new beds when used for replanting.

Fix: Dig and inspect corms showing basal yellowing; discard any with brown rot. Do not replant gladiolus in the same bed for at least 3 to 4 years. Improve drainage before replanting. Dip corms in a thiram or captan fungicide solution before planting to reduce infection risk. Purchase certified disease-free corms from reputable suppliers.

Cause 5: Boron deficiency

Signs: The emerging growing tip is distorted, curled, or fails to unfurl normally. The youngest leaves at the growing point may be twisted or misshapen. The problem is most common in alkaline or sandy soil with low organic matter. The growing tip distortion is the key distinguishing symptom from other causes of leaf curl.

Why it happens: Boron is an essential micronutrient involved in cell wall development and the normal growth of meristematic (growing point) tissue. Deficiency is most common in leached sandy soils, highly alkaline soils where boron becomes unavailable, or following excessive rainfall that leaches soluble boron from the root zone. The growing tip, which requires boron for cell division, shows the most dramatic symptoms.

Fix: Apply a dilute borax solution to the soil around affected plants: dissolve 1 tablespoon of borax in 1 gallon of water and apply to the root zone. Use caution with boron applications as the margin between deficiency and toxicity is narrow; do not over-apply. Incorporating organic matter into the soil improves boron retention. Have the soil tested to confirm deficiency before treating.