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Take-all patch is caused by the fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis. St. Augustine, bermuda and centipede turfgrasses are susceptible to this disease. ...
Last, but definitely not least, is take-all patch. It never takes it all, but that name scares many into thinking that some year…it just might. Diagnosis isn't all that easy. In many cases you send ...
Take all root rot will abate as it turns warm, but there are others waiting to take its place. Gray leaf spot is another fungus that attacks St. Augustine. It causes yellowed patches in the lawn ...
The first symptom of take-all root rot that we notice is the turf starts yellowing in irregular patterns. These yellow patches soon start to thin out and become bare.
I have looked at multiple yards this summer that all have the same problem, and it doesn’t matter where in the county I go. The problem appears to be take-all root rot, or take-all patch.
Take-all patch disease is a problem in certain St. Augustine grass lawns. If you’re among the unlucky, you’ll see yellow areas developing at this time of year. These yellow areas ...
DEAR NEIL: A huge percentage of our St. Augustine did not come back after this past winter. Zoysia that we have growing nearby has been fine. Here in mid-summer the ...
Despite a cool spring, we knew that it was only a matter of time before hot, stressful weather would arrive across the upper Midwest. Right on the heels of the heat and high humidity were brown patch, ...
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