Stress Factor: Soil & Nutrient Stress
Iron Chlorosis
High pH, low energy, and very yellow leaves.
Iron Chlorosis At-a-Glance
Primary Symptom
Bright yellow or ivory-colored new leaves with a distinct "web" of dark green veins (interveinal chlorosis).
Time of Year
Most visible during the Spring Growth Flush when the plant is trying to build a lot of new "plumbing" and runs out of available iron.
Physical Evidence
The smoking gun is often proximity to concrete. If your most yellow plants are the ones right next to your sidewalk, driveway, or foundation, the lime from the concrete is leaching into the soil, raising the pH and locking out the iron. You may also see “hard water” stains on nearby fences or walls.
Iron Chlorosis Explained: Impact and Recovery
Iron chlorosis is a “transportation strike” within the plant. Iron is a key component in the production of chlorophyll, but unlike nitrogen, it is immobile. Once iron is placed in a leaf, it stays there. If the plant cannot pull new iron from the soil, the newest leaves at the tips of the branches emerge yellow. This is almost always caused by high soil pH (alkaline soil), which causes iron to chemically “lock up” in a form the roots cannot digest.
The Impact Scale is Species-Specific. Some plants (like Maples) are “iron-hungry,” while others are perfectly fine in the same soil. The Recovery Potential is Moderate. While you can green the plant up, you are fighting a constant battle against the underlying soil chemistry.
Clues In Turf
In the lawn, iron chlorosis appears as mottled, irregular yellow patches that do not respond to standard “balanced” fertilizers. The grass will look pale and spindly. Unlike nitrogen deficiency, which is a smooth yellowing, iron-deficient turf looks “speckled” or “streaky,” and the yellowing is concentrated on the youngest, topmost blades.
Clues In Plants
The classic marker is Interveinal Chlorosis on the branch tips. As the deficiency worsens, the leaves may turn almost white and develop leaf scorch (brown, crispy edges) because they lack the chlorophyll to protect themselves from sunlight. If you see green leaves at the bottom of a shrub and “bleached” leaves at the top, it is 100% iron chlorosis.
Managing Iron Chlorosis: Immediate and Future Steps
Immediate Action:
Use a Chelated Iron Foliar Spray. “Chelated” iron is chemically wrapped so it doesn’t lock up. Spraying it directly on the leaves provides a “transfusion” that can green up a plant in 48 hours. However, this is temporary and must be repeated every few weeks during the growing season.
Long-Term Prevention:
You must address the soil pH. Apply Elemental Sulfur to gradually lower the pH over several months. For a more direct soil fix, use Chelated Iron Soil Drenches (look for “EDDHA” chelates, as they stay effective in high pH soils where others fail). Improving soil drainage and adding organic matter also helps keep iron in a more “digestible” state for the roots.
Prime Targets and Lookalikes
It mimics Manganese Deficiency and Nitrogen Deficiency. The difference: Nitrogen deficiency yellows the veins too. Manganese looks identical but often includes small “freckles” or brown spots on the leaf, which iron chlorosis does not.
Pin Oaks, River Birches, Azaleas, and Blueberries.
Deep Dives & Practical Guides
Ornamental & Landscape Care, Soil & Nutrition, Turfgrass Management
Beyond the Yellow: A Diagnostic Guide to Iron Chlorosis
When your grass turns yellow but the veins stay green, you aren't looking at a simple nitrogen deficiency. Dive into the science of Iron Chlorosis to understand how soil pH acts as a gatekeeper for your lawn's health and how to fix the chemical lockout in your soil.
Environmental Stress, Gardening Science, Lawn & Plant Health
Mastering Soil Dynamics
Mastering Soil DynamicsMastering Soil DynamicsMastering Soil DynamicsMastering Soil DynamicsMastering Soil Dynamics
Lawn & Plant Health, Ornamental & Landscape Care, Soil & Nutrition
What is my hardiness zone and why zones matter?
Text excerpt
Environmental Stress, Gardening Science, Lawn & Plant Health, Ornamental & Landscape Care, Soil & Nutrition, Turfgrass Management
Test Post
A specific guide about a grass type, such as overseeding Tall Fescue.
Frequently Asked Questions
The responses provided in this FAQ are synthesized from peer-reviewed plant diagnostic studies and standardized troubleshooting protocols from university horticultural clinics. We focus on evidence-based explanations to provide clear, scientific clarity on the most common questions regarding environmental plant injury.
This is the Alkalinity Trap. Soil tests often measure “Total Iron,” which counts iron that is locked up like a rock. If your pH is above 7.0, the iron is there, but it is “insoluble.” The plant is starving in a room full of food that is locked behind a glass door. You don’t need more iron; you need to change the pH or use chelated iron.
No. Rusty nails are made of “iron oxide,” which is the exact form of iron that plants cannot use. Adding more “raw” iron to high pH soil is just adding more rust. You need chelated iron, which is the only form “unlocked” for plant use in difficult soils.
Unlikely. While “Chlorosis” and “Chlorine” sound the same, they aren’t related. City water causes iron issues because it is usually alkaline (high pH) to protect city pipes from rusting. It’s the “sweetness” (pH) of the water, not the chlorine, that is locking out your iron.
Scientific Authority
This profile is built on objective horticultural research and plant pathology data from university-led extension programs. We prioritize physiological evidence regarding environmental stress factors, nutrient availability, and cellular response to provide an unbiased assessment of each abiotic disorder.
Primary Resources
- University of Illinois Extension: “Iron Chlorosis of Woody Ornamentals”
- Utah State University: “Preventing and Treating Iron Chlorosis”
- Purdue University: “Iron Chlorosis in Turfgrass”