• slide
  • slide
  • slide
  • slide
  • slide
  • slide
  • slide
  • slide

Heat Related Tomato Disorders; Yellow Shoulders and White Cores

If your tomato harvest wasn’t up to par this season, you can blame it on the weather. High temperatures can prevent fruit set, delay ripening and impact fruit quality.

When temperatures soar to above 90 during the day and stay above 70 at night, tomato plants suffer producing fewer flowers and setting less fruit.

Even after the fruit is set high temperatures can slow ripening.  Tomatoes ripen most quickly when the temperatures are between 68 and 77 degrees.

High temperatures also cause fruit with yellow shoulders and white cores. Excessive heat prevents the production of lycopene, the red pigment in tomatoes resulting in yellow shoulders.

We can’t change the weather, but maintaining ample foliage on the plants, providing ample moisture and fertilizing properly will help reduce the risk of these disorders.

A bit more information: Harvest yellow shouldered tomatoes when the bottom portion is ripe. Cut off the tougher yellow portion and toss it in the compost pile. Do the same with those with white cores. Cut out the white tasteless portion and use the rest. Missouri Botanical Gardens has more information on tomato diseases and hot weather related problems. A tough white core in the center of the fruit may also occur under these stressful conditions.

Upcoming
Events & Webinars

May 16-17 2026
Ebert's Greenhouse Village
Ixonia, WI

May 20, 2026
Herb Container Workshop
Pewaukee, WI
Register here

May 21, 2026
FREE WEBINAR: 
Planting & Care of Your Rain Garden
Register here

June 3, 2026
FREE WEBINAR: 
Managing Your Landscape
with Pollinators in Mind

Register here

June 10, 2026
Enjoy Life Active Aging Symposium
Brookfield, WI
More information

July 9, 2026
Ebert's 50th Anniversary Celebration
Ixonia, WI

July 11-12, 2026
Festa Italiana
Milwaukee, WI

August 6-16, 2026
Wisconsin State Fair
We Energies Energy Park, West Allis, WI

Sept. 3, 2026
FREE WEBINAR: 
Tree Planting and Care
Register here

Sept. 17, 2026
FREE WEBINAR:
Fall Landscape Care and Planting

Register here

WATCH ON-DEMAND WEBINARS

MORE UPCOMING EVENT DETAILS 

Book an Appearance

Learn More

Sign up for Melinda's free newsletter for a chance to win 3 bags of Wild Valley Farms wool pellets, a water-holding soil amendment

ENTER NOW