FNGLA Horticulture Landscape Maintenance Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

Which of the following best describes the recommended sequence when diagnosing a diseased landscape plant?

Observe symptoms, then test soil and tissue before treating

Test soil before observing symptoms

Replace the plant without diagnosis

Observe symptoms, then test soil and tissue before treating

Diagnosing a diseased landscape plant starts with reading what the plant is showing. Carefully observe symptoms across the plant and over time to notice patterns—where discoloration occurs, how wilting develops, or if there are spots, dieback, or stunted growth. This helps form a working sense of what could be wrong without jumping to conclusions.

Next, use diagnostic tests to confirm what’s causing those symptoms. Soil testing reveals pH, nutrient availability, drainage, salinity, and moisture issues that can drive nutrient problems or stress. Tissue testing shows the plant’s internal nutrient status and can uncover deficiencies, toxicities, or pathogen indicators not obvious from symptoms alone. These tests provide objective evidence to pinpoint the actual problem rather than guessing.

Only after gathering observational clues and test results should you decide on treatment or management. This sequence prevents unnecessary or misdirected actions and leads to targeted, effective remedies.

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