Plant Health Care Systems focuses on exactly that: keeping mango trees healthy so they have the best chance to flower, hold fruit, and keep producing year after year.
Plant Health Care Systems
Plant Health Care Systems focuses on exactly that: keeping mango trees healthy so they have the best chance to flower, hold fruit, and keep producing year after year.
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A healthy mango tree is more than just a shade tree; it is a source of memories, weekend harvests, and that first bite of fruit you wait all year for. In South Florida, though, mango trees rarely stay productive on their own. Nutrition, insects, fungus, and even storm damage can quietly chip away at their health and fruit set.
The goal of our mango program is simple: create healthier trees so fruit production has a chance to improve.
Mango fruit production will always vary from year to year based on age, weather, and overall tree health. Our job is to remove the problems we can control so the tree can respond when conditions are favorable.
New mango growth is tender and attractive to pests. Left alone, they can twist new leaves, damage flowers, and limit fruit set.
Treatments are chosen and timed around the tree’s growth stages so we are protecting the most important flushes and flower clusters, not just spraying on a calendar.
Fungal issues can be just as damaging as insects, especially when they attack new growth and blossoms. When young shoots and flower panicles are hit, potential fruit is lost before it even forms.
By combining fungus control with good nutrition and insect management, we give the tree a better chance to carry healthy fruit to maturity.
One of our customers in Key Largo had a prized mango that was heavily damaged by Hurricane Irma. Years later, the tree still was not recovering. New growth came in distorted and weak, and it was being hit by insects like mites and thrips along with fungal problems such as powdery mildew.
Over a two-year period we put the tree on a focused program of insect control, fungus treatments, and balanced fertilization. As the treatments and nutrition took hold, the tree rebuilt healthy new growth and returned to full canopy.
When it finally fruited again, we were able to identify the variety as ‘Irwin.’ The tree has continued to produce since then a good example of what is possible when you give a stressed mango the right help and enough time to respond.
Even if your tree still looks “mostly okay,” early work is almost always easier than trying to rescue a tree that has declined for years.
If you want your mango tree to stay healthy and keep producing, you do not have to guess about treatments or timing. Call us now or request a free, no-obligation evaluation. Plant Health Care Systems will inspect your mango tree, explain what is helping or hurting fruit production, and build a treatment and nutrition plan that gives your tree the best chance to thrive and bear fruit in the years ahead.