I took the root cutting in 2024 spring repot , potted it up with about 10 others and let them grow for a year. Then this early spring I stuck them in the grow bed in the yard. I didn't notice anything odd when I planted it but I'm sure it didn't have any leaves on it. Fast forward to about April this year I noticed that the leaves were tiny especially compared to the others I had planted. I thought well they'll catch up to the others here soon but as of yesterday they are still very tiny. They don't get any fertilizer other than the micro-dose I give daily with every watering. The others are literally 5 foot branches shooting up with regular 3/4" leaves. I don't get it, none of the mother plants that I took the cuttings from have small leaves. I always thought that cuttings would be a clone of the parent plant but not this one. Any ideas would be appreciated.Have you fertilized it at all since planting? Were the leaves normal before putting it in the ground?
The only chemical that the yard has experienced is an insecticide named Wisdom that I use to control the little Argentine ants that invade my yard every summer. The little white spots I have no idea but as I have taken more photos today the spots are no longer there in any quantity.Very interesting... wonder if it's due to random variation in gene expression or an epigenetic change. In the first case: even when genotypes are identical between organisms, sometimes you get variance in the way they are expressed, which can cause phenotypical differences (think of how identical twins have different fingerprints).
Epigenetic changes are similar in that they result in a heritable change to some characteristic without altering the actual genes, but they're caused by exposure to some external influence (such as a pesticide), not random chance. I think that would be what's happening in the case KateM mentioned, or Frank Yee's cork-bark jades (corking developed after exposure to DDT); their genes weren't directly altered by the chemicals they were exposed to, but their physical expression was, and this change persists in new tissue long after initial exposure.
It could also be a disease, or physical or environmental stresses like rockm mentioned. What are those white spots on the leaves? Do your other elms from the same batch have similar leaf color, etc.?
Perhaps you're correct, but its just odd that the other cuttings are not affected in the least.Doesn’t look like a genetic mutation to me. I’ve seen similar responses to damage in trees in my neighborhood. This ain’t a witches broom of dwarf genetic material. It’s some kind of response to physical stress
Only thing I (not experienced, at all) have seen cause something like mutated leaf growth, is over fertilization. Fertilizer Burn...This could be a few things. Some of them not so good. Could be side effects from physical damage (note all the pruned and/or broken branching surrounding the patch of small leaves. Could also be insect attack (leaf gall etc) or infection.