Hi guys,
I live in Southern California. My boyfriend's parents have a small papaya seedling that is growing in a container. I believe they planted it from a seed from a grocery-store papaya, but I'm not positive about that. It's several months old now.
The seedling has been doing very well, but a few days ago (after some weird back-and-forth weather that was rainy, then super-hot), the top half of the seedling flopped over. My boyfriend reported that the trunk/leaf stems felt soft and squishy that same day.
I felt the trunk yesterday and it felt relatively firm, not squishy or anything. If I attempt to gently straighten the seedling, it resists a bit. The leaves also felt relatively robust; not dry or shriveled, but the newest leaves growing appear very translucent and feel fragile. (see attached picture).
My boyfriend's parents do tend to over-water, and the house gets a lot of morning dew this time of year, plus the backyard doesn't get a lot of sun. I know these are all less-than-optimal conditions for growing plants (especially fruiting plants), but no other plants in the backyard have exhibited this papaya seedling's floppage. I don't think the pot was laying on its side for any significant amount of time either.
Does anyone have any theories why the seedling, which was growing straight and fine up until now, would suddenly flop over? Is there anything we can do to remedy it? Should we perhaps gently pull the seedling upright and stake it?
Thank you.
Why Did Papaya Seedling Flop Over?
Not a theory: Stem thickness and rigidity is directly related to photo load. The more light the plant receives and the more photosynthesizing surface area the plant has, the more food-making capability the plant has. Food production is directly related to the number of cell files laid down in the vascular cambium. These layers of cells determine stem/branch thickness and strength. Your plant flopped because it's not making enough food to ensure the number of cell files laid down in cambial tissues will make it strong enough to resist the forces that caused it to flop - gravity & wind.
To correct, top the plant immediately above the transitional bend.
Al
Post a Reply to this Thread
More Ask-a-Dave's-Gardener Threads
-
Boston fern
started by Texas001
last post by Texas001Apr 11, 20252Apr 11, 2025 -
What\'s going on with this coleus plant?
started by LAS14
last post by LAS14Apr 17, 20251Apr 17, 2025 -
Water Vine identification
started by Kat6214
last post by Kat6214Apr 18, 20250Apr 18, 2025 -
ID loooong taproot plant in my garden
started by Veggiemuffin
last post by VeggiemuffinJul 11, 20251Jul 11, 2025 -
Golden Full Moon Japanese Maple Soil Mix
started by travish413
last post by travish413Jan 15, 20262Jan 15, 2026
