Sweet Potato Vine Leaves Curling

Why the leaves curl and how to keep the foliage lush all season

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At a glance

  • Leaves wilting and curling downward with dry soil: Drought stress; water consistently, especially in containers in hot weather
  • Leaves curling down with yellow tinge and white insects flying up: Whiteflies; treat with insecticidal soap and yellow sticky traps
  • Leaves curling upward at the margins with yellowing and smaller leaves: Sweet potato leaf curl virus; remove and destroy plant
  • Leaves yellowing and curling with wet soil: Overwatering; allow to dry and improve drainage
  • Leaves blackening and curling rapidly after cool night: Cold damage; move indoors or protect before temperatures drop below 50 degrees Fahrenheit

Why sweet potato vine leaves curl

Ornamental sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas) is one of the most popular foliage plants for summer containers, hanging baskets, and garden beds, grown for its rapid growth and striking leaves in lime green, deep purple, bronze, and variegated forms. It is related to the edible sweet potato and shares its vigor and heat tolerance. The large, distinctive leaves make water stress and pest damage immediately visible, which makes sweet potato vine somewhat easier to diagnose than plants with smaller or less expressive leaves.

Cause 1: Drought stress

Signs: The leaves are wilting and curling downward and inward during the hottest part of the day. The soil is dry. The plant recovers substantially after thorough watering, though repeatedly drought-stressed plants may not fully recover their vigor. Container plants, especially in hanging baskets with coco fiber liners, show these symptoms most rapidly. The large lime-green varieties show stress most visibly because the reduced turgidity produces a visible drooping of the large leaf blades.

Why it happens: Sweet potato vine grows extremely rapidly in warm weather and produces a large leaf area that transpires substantial moisture. In containers, especially in full sun, the growing medium can exhaust its available water within a single hot day. Despite the plant's general heat tolerance, it is not drought-tolerant and requires consistent moisture to maintain the lush appearance that makes it desirable as a foliage plant. The tuberous roots store some water but are not sufficient to sustain the plant through extended dry periods in containers.

Fix: Water consistently, checking containers daily in summer and watering when the top inch of the medium is dry. In very hot weather, hanging baskets may need watering twice daily. Switching from coco fiber-lined wire baskets to solid plastic containers reduces water loss through the sides. Apply a dilute liquid fertilizer every 2 weeks to support the vigorous growth. Trim back overly long stems if the plant has outgrown its container, which also reduces the total leaf area requiring water.

Cause 2: Whiteflies

Signs: The leaves are curling downward and developing a yellowish or pale appearance. When the plant is touched or shaken, clouds of tiny white insects (1 to 2 mm) fly up from the undersides of the foliage. Dense colonies of flat, oval whitefly nymphs are visible on the undersides of older leaves. Sticky honeydew coats the foliage below the colony and black sooty mold may develop on it. Flower buds and new growth may also be affected.

Why it happens: Sweet potato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci) is a specialist whitefly that feeds preferentially on Ipomoea and related plants, though greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum) also attacks ornamental sweet potato vine. Sweet potato vine's rapid growth and large leaf area provide excellent feeding and shelter for whitefly colonies. Populations build rapidly in warm conditions and are most severe on plants grown in sheltered positions or indoors where natural predators are absent.

Fix: Place yellow sticky traps to monitor and capture adults. Apply insecticidal soap or neem oil to the undersides of all leaves, where both adults and nymphs feed; thorough coverage is essential. Repeat every 5 to 7 days for 3 to 4 applications. Control ants with sticky barriers or bait to allow parasitic wasps to access whitefly colonies. For systemic control on severely infested plants not in flower, imidacloprid as a soil drench provides longer-lasting protection but has bee toxicity implications and should not be used on flowering plants.

Cause 3: Sweet potato leaf curl virus

Signs: The leaf margins are curling upward, which is the reverse direction from drought or whitefly-induced curl. The affected leaves are also yellowing and smaller than normal. The plant's overall vigor is reduced. New leaves emerging are distorted and smaller than the older, healthy leaves. The symptoms are persistent and worsen over time; they do not improve with watering or fertilizing.

Why it happens: Sweet potato leaf curl virus (SPLCV) is a begomovirus transmitted by the sweet potato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci). The virus is systemic throughout the plant including the tuberous roots. Ornamental sweet potato vine is susceptible, and whitefly populations on summer plantings can transmit the virus from infected edible sweet potato or morning glory plants nearby. Vegetatively propagated plants from infected stock transmit the virus to all new plants.

What to do: Remove and destroy infected plants, including the roots. Do not use roots or cuttings from infected plants for propagation, as the virus persists in all plant tissue. Control whiteflies on remaining healthy plants to reduce transmission risk. Purchase sweet potato vine from reputable suppliers and inspect new plants for upward curling and reduced leaf size before planting.

Cause 4: Overwatering

Signs: The leaves are yellowing from the base of the plant upward, with curling and eventual collapse of the stems. The soil is wet or waterlogged. The roots and tuberous structures may show brown rot when the plant is removed from the pot. The problem is most common in containers without drainage holes or in heavy, poorly draining soil.

Why it happens: While sweet potato vine needs consistent moisture, it cannot tolerate waterlogged conditions; the developing tubers and roots rot in anaerobic, saturated soil. Container plants with blocked drainage holes or pots left sitting in saucers of water are most at risk. The vigorous above-ground growth can mask early root problems until they are severe.

Fix: Reduce watering and allow the soil to dry between waterings. Check that drainage holes are clear. Repot into well-draining potting mix if the current medium is heavy or poorly aerated. Remove any rotted root material and allow cut surfaces to dry before replanting.

Cause 5: Cold damage

Signs: The leaves are curling and rapidly blackening following exposure to cool temperatures or frost. The damage appears suddenly after a cold night and can affect the entire plant within hours of frost exposure. Even temperatures in the 40s cause wilting and discoloration before the plant recovers if the cold was brief.

Why it happens: Sweet potato vine is a tropical plant that is damaged by temperatures below 50 degrees Fahrenheit and killed by frost. The large, succulent leaves are particularly frost-sensitive. In autumn, the first cool nights can cause significant damage even if frosts have not yet occurred.

Fix: Move container sweet potato vine indoors before the first cool nights of autumn, when nighttime temperatures begin falling below 55 degrees Fahrenheit. Alternatively, dig the tubers before frost, cure and store them dry indoors over winter, and replant in spring after all frost risk has passed. In-ground plants in marginal climates can sometimes overwinter if the tubers are deeply mulched, but reliable overwintering requires indoor storage of the tubers.