Is Your Tomato Garden Struggling? This Flower Might Be To Blame
One particularly troublesome plant to include in your tomato garden is the sunflower. If your tomatoes are struggling and there are sunflowers nearby, that could be your reason. This is because sunflowers are allelopathic. Their roots release chemicals that inhibit the growth of nearby plants within about a three-foot area. Some plants are especially sensitive to these chemicals, tomatoes among them. In fact, tomatoes are best grown away from a number of other plants.
From a survival standpoint, it makes sense for a sunflower to produce these chemicals. If a plant can suppress the growth of other plants nearby, it eliminates competition for resources. That means the sunflower gets more access to soil nutrients, sunlight, and water to sustain itself. It also means that the sunflower's seedlings will have an even easier time the following season.
Read more: 12 Store-Bought Italian Salad Dressings, Ranked Worst To Best
Even if sunflower roots weren't toxic to your tomatoes, they would still cause several other problems. One obvious issue is the towering height of sunflowers. Growing well over tomato plants, they can easily block the sun. Tomatoes kept in constant shade grow much less vigorously than those grown in full sun. Sunflowers also act as disease vectors for tomato plants. A study from Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) showed that tomatoes planted near sunflowers were susceptible to diseases such as tobacco mosaic virus and early blight. These infections result in lower tomato yields and plant loss.
It's unclear whether the increased disease risk is due to the allelopathic roots of the sunflowers or other causes. Practically speaking, it doesn't matter why the tomatoes are more vulnerable to these infections. Your tomatoes are likely to suffer if grown with sunflowers either way. Because both sunflowers and tomatoes demand large amounts of light and nutrients, planting them together leads to direct competition for resources. Sunflowers also require several gallons of water during a watering, meaning they will suffer when the tomatoes absorb some of the water and soil nutrients -- in other words, neither plant will benefit from being near the other one.
Since those toxins produced by sunflower roots already give sunflowers a competitive edge, tomatoes typically lose out. If they grow at all, the fruit will be small and have a much smaller yield. If you want to have both tomatoes and sunflowers in your garden, it's best to space them well apart so they can each thrive. Both the seeds and flowers of sunflowers are edible, so they are useful to keep in the garden. And if you're looking for a suitable companion for your vines, here's why you should plant basil with tomatoes.
Read the original article on Tasting Table.
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