At a glance
- Leaves stippled and pale with insects jumping off when disturbed: Leafhoppers; treat with insecticidal soap and reflective mulch
- Leaves curling upward in hot, dry weather with dry soil: Drought stress; water deeply and mulch
- Leaves distorted and flowers turning green or leafy: Aster yellows; remove and destroy plant immediately
- Leaves yellowing and curling with wet soil: Overwatering or root rot; reduce watering and improve drainage
- Leaves stippled and bronzed with fine webbing: Spider mites; treat with insecticidal soap
Why salvia leaves curl
Salvias (Salvia species and hybrids) are one of the most diverse and popular groups of garden plants, ranging from annual bedding salvias (Salvia splendens) to perennial border salvias (Salvia nemorosa, Salvia x superba) to shrubby perennials (Salvia greggii, Salvia microphylla) and culinary sage (Salvia officinalis). Their aromatic foliage contains essential oils that deter many pests, but leafhoppers are a significant exception and are the most important pest cause of salvia leaf curl. Aster yellows, transmitted by leafhoppers, is the most damaging disease because it is incurable and spreads rapidly to neighboring susceptible plants.
Cause 1: Leafhoppers
Signs: The leaves have a stippled, pale, or silvery appearance on the upper surface where the leaf cells have been emptied by feeding. The margins of the leaves may curl upward. Small, wedge-shaped insects (2 to 4 mm) jump off the plant rapidly when it is disturbed. Multiple plants in the same bed may be affected simultaneously. The aster leafhopper (Macrosteles quadrilineatus) is greenish-yellow with distinctive black spots on its head.
Why it happens: Leafhoppers feed by piercing leaf cells on the underside of leaves and extracting the contents, leaving the distinctive stippled damage on the upper surface. They are highly mobile insects that migrate into gardens from surrounding fields and wild areas, which makes them difficult to prevent entirely. The aster leafhopper is particularly significant because it transmits aster yellows phytoplasma while feeding, converting a cosmetic pest problem into a potentially serious disease event.
Fix: Apply insecticidal soap or neem oil to the leaf undersides where leafhoppers feed, and repeat every 7 to 10 days. Use reflective silver mulch around plants to disorient leafhoppers as they approach; this reduces leafhopper landings significantly. Row covers on young plants exclude leafhoppers during the most vulnerable establishment period. Monitor the bed for leafhoppers regularly and inspect any plants showing stippled leaves for the early signs of aster yellows (leaf distortion, abnormal flower color).
Cause 2: Drought stress
Signs: The leaves are curling upward and inward during the hottest part of the day. The soil is dry. Annual salvia in containers and recently planted perennial salvias show these symptoms most readily. The plant recovers overnight or after watering. Flower production is reduced during prolonged drought.
Why it happens: Annual salvias (Salvia splendens) and salvias in containers need consistent moisture to maintain their peak flowering. Perennial salvias become increasingly drought-tolerant as their root systems establish over 2 to 3 years, but young plants and those in containers lack this resilience. The aromatic leaf oils that deter many insects also reduce water loss through the leaves, but this adaptation has limits during extreme heat and drought.
Fix: Water deeply and consistently; check containers daily in summer and water when the top inch of soil is dry. Mulch around in-ground plants to retain soil moisture. For established perennial salvias, deep, infrequent watering (soaking the root zone every 7 to 10 days in summer) is better than frequent shallow watering. Choose drought-adapted perennial salvia species (S. greggii, S. microphylla, S. nemorosa) for dry gardens as these tolerate drought far better than annual forms.
Cause 3: Aster yellows
Signs: The leaves are yellowing and distorted. The flowers are abnormal: petals are turning green or leafy (phyllody), flowers fail to develop, or the plant produces dense, stunted, chlorotic growth from the flower head. The whole plant is affected and worsening. Leafhoppers may have been observed on or near the plant. The symptoms are dramatic and distinctive and do not respond to any treatment.
Why it happens: Aster yellows phytoplasma (Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris) is transmitted by the aster leafhopper, which carries the phytoplasma from infected weed and garden plant hosts to healthy salvias. Salvias are susceptible hosts, and once infected, the phytoplasma disrupts hormone signaling throughout the plant and causes the distinctive flower abnormalities. The phytoplasma cannot be eliminated from an infected plant.
What to do: Remove and destroy infected plants immediately. Control leafhoppers with reflective mulch and targeted insecticide applications. Remove weed hosts (plantain, wild carrot, dandelion) from the garden. Do not compost infected plants.
Cause 4: Overwatering
Signs: The leaves are yellowing and curling downward despite regular watering. The soil stays wet for extended periods. The plant looks poor despite apparent care. The lower stems may be soft and dark at the base. Root inspection reveals brown, mushy roots. The problem is most common in clay soil or containers without drainage holes.
Why it happens: Salvias evolved in well-drained soils across Mediterranean climates, scrublands, and dry grasslands. Their roots are not adapted to waterlogged conditions and rot quickly in saturated soil. This is particularly true of Mediterranean sage species (S. officinalis, S. rosmarinus/Rosmarinus officinalis) and drought-adapted perennial species, which can be killed by overwatering more easily than annual salvias.
Fix: Reduce watering and allow the soil to dry between waterings. Ensure containers drain freely. For in-ground plants in heavy soil, improve drainage by incorporating coarse grit or planting on a raised bed. In severe root rot, remove the plant, trim rotted roots, and replant in fresh, well-draining soil.
Cause 5: Spider mites
Signs: The leaves have a stippled, pale, or bronzed appearance with fine webbing between leaves and at stem joints. The damage intensifies in hot, dry summer conditions. The plant looks dusty and stressed. Tiny moving specks on the leaf undersides confirm spider mites. Salvias in hot, sunny, sheltered positions are most susceptible.
Why it happens: Spider mites attack salvias in hot, dry summer conditions, particularly plants that are drought-stressed. While the aromatic oils in salvia leaves deter some pests, spider mites are not significantly deterred and will colonize drought-stressed salvia in summer. Container salvias and those in very hot, sheltered positions are most at risk.
Fix: Blast the plant with a strong jet of water to dislodge mites. Apply insecticidal soap or neem oil to all leaf surfaces, concentrating on the undersides, and repeat every 5 to 7 days for 3 applications. Ensure the plant is adequately watered to reduce drought stress. Avoid broad-spectrum insecticides that eliminate predatory mites.