this post was submitted on 29 Jul 2024
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That could still be too much or too little depending on soil and air conditions. A quick Google says they like slightly moist soil. If it's soggy, that's too much water. If they dry out, that's too dry. (Too dry is easier to recover from, but from appearances, it's probably too much rather than too little water.)
If it had plenty of other growth, I'd say you could remove those leaves, but it's not really big enough for that.
I don't think it's actually an infection. The only other possibility would be unsuitable soil conditions. I assume at some point it was repotted with fresh fertilized potting mix, and wasn't over-fertilized, though that could also cause what you're seeing.
Just in general, the problem isn't actually the quantity of water. Too much/too frequent water leads to 2 main real instead though. Not enough air getting to the roots, or a fungal infection in the roots / soil. The latter is the bigger problem for plants because you solve it by letting things dry out, which usually kills the plant before the fungus.