Short Answer: Take-all root rot is one of the most damaging diseases on Huntsville area St. Augustine and Bermuda lawns. The earliest signs are yellowing in irregular patches, thinning grass that pulls up easily because the roots are gone, and damage that does not respond to watering. Catching it in the yellowing stage is the difference between treatment that saves the lawn and treatment that comes too late. Treatment requires a fungicide program plus addressing soil chemistry, particularly the alkaline pH that favors the disease. Here is how to spot it early and what to do across Huntsville, Madison, Athens, and our broader service area.
Take-all root rot is the disease North Alabama homeowners need to know about. It is widespread in our area, it spreads quickly when conditions are right, and it can destroy a lawn within a single season if left untreated. The frustrating part is that early signs look like watering issues, so a lot of homeowners misdiagnose it and water more, which actually makes the disease worse.
Across Huntsville, Madison, Athens, and our broader service area, here is what to watch for and how to respond.
What Take-All Root Rot Is
Take-all root rot is caused by a soil fungus that attacks grass roots. The fungus is widespread in our soils and only causes visible damage when conditions favor it: alkaline pH, compaction, poor drainage, and stressed turf.
The disease attacks from below ground first. The fungus colonizes the root system, killing roots and gradually destroying the plant’s ability to absorb water and nutrients. By the time you see surface symptoms, the roots have already been compromised.
St. Augustine grass is the most commonly affected in our area, but Bermuda and Zoysia can also develop take-all under the right conditions. Properties along the limestone-influenced soils common across Madison County are particularly susceptible because the natural pH runs alkaline.
The Earliest Signs
Catching take-all early gives you a much better chance of saving the lawn. The earliest signs:
Patches of yellowing grass with irregular shapes, often appearing in spring or early summer.
Affected areas that look stressed or thin even though watering and fertilization have been consistent.
Grass blades that pull up easily because the roots have been destroyed underneath. A gentle tug on what looks like healthy grass at the patch edge often produces a section that comes up cleanly.
Soil at the patch may be slightly more compacted or less able to hold moisture than surrounding healthy areas.
Damage that does not respond to watering. This is one of the strongest early indicators.
Confirming Diagnosis
The most reliable way to confirm take-all root rot is to dig up a section of grass at the edge of an affected area and look at the roots. Healthy St. Augustine roots are white and extend several inches into the soil. Take-all roots are dark, rotted, and short, sometimes barely present at all.
If you can pull up handfuls of grass with no resistance and minimal root attached, take-all is likely. Visual inspection plus root examination are usually enough to confirm without lab testing.
What Conditions Favor It
Take-all thrives under specific conditions:
Alkaline soil pH (above 7.5). Many Huntsville area soils fall in this range due to the underlying limestone geology.
Compacted soils with poor oxygen exchange.
Poor drainage where water lingers.
High soil moisture, particularly when combined with warm temperatures.
Excessive nitrogen that pushes soft top growth without supporting roots.
Stress from any source (drought, traffic, scalping mowing) that weakens the grass.
Knowing the conditions helps prevent recurrence after treatment.
Treatment Approach
Effective take-all treatment combines several actions:
Fungicide applications. Several products are effective when timed properly. Azoxystrobin, propiconazole, and tebuconazole all have track records for take-all control. Application timing typically targets soil temperatures of 65 to 70 degrees, which in Huntsville is usually early spring (March) and again in fall.
Soil chemistry corrections. Sulfur applications can gradually reduce soil pH toward the more grass-friendly 6.0 to 7.0 range. This is slow work over multiple seasons.
Watering adjustments. Less frequent, deeper watering. Mornings only. Drying the lawn out between waterings.
Fertility adjustments. Reduce nitrogen during active disease. Supplement with potassium, which improves disease resistance.
Aeration to improve soil oxygen and reduce compaction.
No single treatment is sufficient. The combination is what saves lawns.
Recovery Timeline
Take-all recovery is slow. Even with proper treatment, the dead grass does not green back up. The disease has destroyed the roots, and the grass has to either regrow from surviving stolons (St. Augustine spreads through stolons) or be replaced through plugging or sodding.
Light to moderate damage often recovers within 3 to 6 months as healthy stolons spread into affected areas.
Heavy damage requires reseeding or sodding to recover within reasonable time.
The key insight: stopping the spread is what treatment accomplishes. Recovery is largely time and turf-management work.
What Makes It Worse
Common mistakes that worsen take-all:
Watering more in response to yellow grass. Wet conditions feed the disease.
Applying high-nitrogen fertilizer to “help” the lawn. Soft growth invites the disease.
Continuing to mow normally on stressed turf. Aggressive mowing adds to the stress.
Treating with the wrong fungicide or at the wrong time. Take-all fungicide timing is specific.
Ignoring soil chemistry. Treating only the visible disease without addressing the underlying conditions guarantees recurrence.
Prevention Going Forward
Once you have addressed an active outbreak, prevention focuses on reducing the conditions that favor the disease:
Annual soil testing and gradual pH adjustment toward the 6.0 to 7.0 range.
Aeration to keep soil from compacting.
Watering practices that let the lawn dry out between cycles.
Balanced fertility (avoid excessive nitrogen).
Proper mowing height (3 to 4 inches for St. Augustine in Huntsville) to reduce stress.
Many North Alabama properties benefit from preventative fungicide applications in early spring on a recurring schedule, especially if take-all has been present in the past.
Why Huntsville Sees Heavy Take-All Pressure
Our region’s soil geology contributes to take-all prevalence in ways some Bermuda and St. Augustine regions do not face. The underlying limestone produces alkaline soils naturally. Combined with the Tennessee Valley humidity and warm temperatures, conditions favor the fungus more here than in some southern markets with sandier, more acidic soils.
Properties built on disturbed limestone soil (common in newer construction across Madison and Limestone Counties) often face higher take-all pressure than older established lawns. Soil amendments matter more here than in many southeastern markets.
What to Do Next
If you suspect take-all root rot in your Huntsville area lawn, time matters. The earlier we treat, the more lawn we save. We walk properties across our service area to examine the roots, confirm the diagnosis, and put together a treatment plan tailored to your situation. If you would rather have someone else handle the timing decisions, product selection, and application for your Huntsville lawn, we are here for that.
Visit lawnsquad.com to find Lawn Squad of Huntsville and request a free quote. Our VitaminLawn program is built specifically for the grass types, soils, and weather patterns in our service area. Most homeowners see noticeable improvement within the first two applications.