Overwatering on ficus lyrata
What's Happening
Ficus lyrata's root system requires oxygen exchange between waterings to maintain aerobic metabolic function. When watering occurs before soil dries 2-3 inches deep, the epiphytic-adapted fine roots suffocate in waterlogged conditions. This triggers anaerobic bacterial proliferation that breaks down root tissue, compromising the plant's ability to uptake water and nutrients despite soil moisture. The thick caudex and succulent leaves mask early root decline until structural failure occurs.
How to Fix It
- 1
Check soil moisture at 2-3 inch depth using finger or wooden skewer before every watering
- 2
If soil is moist at depth despite surface dryness—DO NOT WATER
- 3
Lift pot test: heavy pot with dry surface indicates water retention below—delay watering
- 4
Switch to terracotta pots which wick excess moisture through porous walls
- 5
Install soil moisture meter with probe reaching 4 inches depth for accurate readings
What You'll Need
How to Prevent It
Implement finger test: insert finger 2-3 inches deep before every watering—only water when soil feels completely dry; use well-draining potting mix with 30-40% perlite; select terracotta pots for moisture wicking; avoid automated watering systems.
Related Problems
Same Problem on Other Plants
Go Deeper
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