Get It Growing for 02/20/26
For a long time in Louisiana, the biggest risk that came with growing palms was incurring freeze damage in the winter. In the past decade, however, two diseases have emerged as new threats to these beautiful tropical plants.
The diseases — lethal bronzing and lethal yellowing — are closely related and affect several palm species. They’ve been reported in parishes across southern Louisiana, with infections concentrated in the Baton Rouge and New Orleans areas.
“Both those diseases are terminal,” said LSU AgCenter plant doctor Raj Singh. “But they don’t produce unique symptoms so that you can easily separate them from abiotic disorders like freeze injury.”
Lethal bronzing and lethal yellowing cause palms’ fronds to turn brown. This is where things get confusing: It’s perfectly normal for palms to exhibit similar symptoms following freezing temperatures and as older fronds die off.
“A lot of palms have been sacrificed because a homeowner or landscaper thought they had a disease that was actually freeze damage,” Singh said.
Wondering whether your palm has a disease — or if it was simply affected by recent freezes?
There are a few telltale signs of lethal bronzing and lethal yellowing:
While these clues can point toward a lethal bronzing or lethal yellowing infection, they’re not enough to definitively say a palm is infected. To do that, you’ll need to send in a sample to the AgCenter Plant Diagnostic Center, which Singh oversees.
It’s worth taking this extra step to figure out for sure whether one of these diseases or a different ailment or an abiotic stressor is in play. Freeze-damaged palms sometimes — but not always — can recover with proper care and don’t necessarily have to be removed from the landscape.
A palm stricken with lethal bronzing or lethal yellowing, on the other hand, needs to be taken down immediately. This can help prevent disease spread to nearby palms, and the infected palm will die soon anyway.
“Once the palm is infected, there is no cure,” Singh said.
Preventative treatments are available to help healthy palms resist phytoplasma infection, which is transmitted and spread by a small leafhopper insect called Haplaxius crudus.
“They will feed on the phloem of the palm, and while they’re feeding, they will transmit the phytoplasma into the phloem system of the plant,” Singh said.
The phytoplasma hampers translocation of nutrients inside the palm, essentially starving it to death.
If you’re interested in growing palms, you can be careful in choosing species as another preventative measure. Canary Island date palms, Chinese fan palms, Chinese windmill palms, medjool date palms, queen palms and silver date palms are all susceptible to lethal bronzing and lethal yellowing. Sabal, or cabbage, palms are a bit more tolerant of these diseases than other species.
You can find more information about these diseases and learn how to submit samples to the Plant Diagnostic Center by visiting www.LSUAgCenter.com/PlantDiagnosticCenter.
LSU AgCenter plant doctor Raj Singh joins horticulturist Jason Stagg to explain how to tell whether a palm has a disease such as lethal yellowing or lethal bronzing.
These Chinese windmill palms show lethal yellowing symptoms. LSU AgCenter file photo
The spear leaf of this Chinese windmill palm is dead as a result of infection with lethal yellowing phytoplasma. LSU AgCenter file photo
This Chinese windmill palm has lethal bronzing. LSU AgCenter file photo
This silver palm exhibits symptoms associated with freeze damage. LSU AgCenter file photo