this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2023
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I have this Meyer lemon tree in a pot. The leaves are slowly but steadily falling off, and each little lemon turns completely black and falls off before it even grows to like a centimeter or two. What could I be doing wrong? I have a soil moisture meter and I only water it when the meter reads "dry". Could it be my grow light isn't right or isnt strong enough?

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I can only say things based on the appearance of your plant, maybe my "diagnostics" are wrong... The soil seems a bit dry, and they like wet soil, the place seems a bit cold, I don't know, to produce lemons you need a good warm temperature, maybe 26-27 ° celsius. Also, maybe she had consumed some of the minerals and nutrients in the soil, try to renovate organic material... if it is the only light source that plant has, I believe that it needs more light to produce lemon, maybe 6 hours of sun per day minimum. Plants indoors tend to become filthy, so maybe you have to clean the leafs to increase the photosynthesis metabolism and to "spray" some water on it every 2 or 3 days.

[–] MetalAirship 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

hm, the leaves are a bit dusty, I will definitely try cleaning them. As for temp, I am in the northeast so not too much I can do about it (temps are around 18c/65f). I just re-potted it into a larger pot than the one I bought it in, and added some fertilizer when I did that - I'm wondering if the other commenter is right and maybe its too much fertilizer

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think that is not the case, because if it would be over fertilized it would has some burned and brown leafs. If you still have doubts about over-fertilizing, you can water it a lot for once, to clean the excess of chemical materials.

[–] MetalAirship 1 points 1 year ago

OK, yeah when the leaves fall off they are either fully green or just a little bit yellow. I am always paranoid about over-watering, as I have definitely killed plants in the past this way (especially potted plants). But maybe I should do as you say and give it a one-time burst of water

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Perhaps over fertilized?

I did that a few months ago on a year old tree, learned the hard way. Half the tree lost its leaves and new growth died prematurely. No fruit yet so can't comment on that. I also had to trim the tips of the branches since they started to dry out. Luckily, a few months since, growth has restarted.

(My tree is outdoors so I can't comment on light being a factor for an indoor tree 😬)

[–] tlongstretch 1 points 1 year ago

over-fertilization typically appears as leaf tip burn, I don't think this is it

[–] MetalAirship 1 points 1 year ago

I just re-potted it and added fertilizer when I did that, so maybe that could be it. Is there a way to test for that so I know for sure? Soil PH maybe?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The light looks underpowered for the plant's needs. Take a look here at the "lighting for indoor trees" section and compare those specs to the light you're using. I've seen a number of inexpensive "grow lights" that don't produce the necessary spectrum or lumens, so be sure to take note of the manufacturer specifications if you decide to replace your lights

[–] MetalAirship 1 points 1 year ago

That looks like a really good resource, and according to it I do have a few things wrong. Seems like the light is probably under powered, although its hard to tell since I can't find the specs on it anywhere (GE model #93101232). So looks like I'll have to upgrade the light. I also put stones in the bottom of the pot and that link says specifically not to do that, I wonder how bad that actually is since it would be kind of a pain to get them out now

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I had this problem with my citrus tree and it improved when I moved it to direct sunlight. Yours doesn’t look nitrogen deficient so I would suggest a stronger light/move to sunlight

[–] tlongstretch 1 points 1 year ago

I have grown hundreds of container citrus trees and meyer lemons are finicky. In general citrus aren't terribly happy indoors where it is quite dry. I have mine in a greenhouse in winter where it is fairly humid and they all do great.... except the meyer lemon which is never all that happy.

I strongly suggest a non-meyer lemon. The grocery store types 'Eureka' and 'Lisbon' are great, and commonly available. Also Pink Variegated Eureka makes a pretty striped and pink-inside fruit, though less productive than the others.

I have grown many lemon trees and they are all kinda similar (except meyer which is a hybrid)

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