Penetration and initial establishment of Nectria galligena in aspen and peachleaf willow

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Penetration and initial establishment of Nectria galligena in aspen and peachleaf willow"

Transcription

1 Penetration and initial establishment of Nectria galligena in aspen and peachleaf willow H. ZALASKY Department of Forestry alld Rural Developmel/t of Cal/ada, Forest Research Laboratory, Willl/ipeg, Manitoba Received September 11, 1967 Histological studies of artificially inoculated aspen and peach leaf willow revealed that Nectria galligena penetrated the periderm directly. Penetration and establishment in the petiole base and leaf trace was noticeably more rapid than in the periderm. The resulting lesions in all infections were small and usually latent. Canadian Journal of Botany, 46, 57 (1968) Introduction The methods by which Nectria galligena Bres. enters the host have not been established fully although numerous workers have made important observations on infections in both fruit trees and hardwoods. Goethe's experimental results (1880) with injured and uninjured apple bark of naturally infected twig cuttings maintained in a moist chamber suggested that the germ tubes of conidia and ascospores of Nectria penetrated directly through the epidermis and lenticels. Several studies have indicated that infection by N. galligena does not occur through non-wounded bark; rather it enters through unprotected wounds, small injuries, and leaf scars (Boyce 1961). However, inoculations of intact and wounded bark of aspen, Populus tremuloides Michx., of unspecified age, with mycelium of N. galligena have not been very successful (Lortie ). The relationship between leaf scars and cankers on young stems of apple was first established by Wiltshire (1921). Later it was found that infections in leaf scars either developed immediately into cankers or were confined by a suberized or gum barrier (Crowdy 1952). In the present study, canker formation caused by N. galligella on aspen was investigated in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Observations suggested that infection occurs when the trees are young and that bark infections result in latent cankers. Similar observations were made on hardwoods throughout the northeastern Atlantic States (Brandt 1964). In the past, the infection courts at the petiole, leaf trace, and periderm of aspen and peachleaf willow, Salix amygdaloides Anderss., have received little study and their role in the disease cycle remains obscure. The present study is concerned with the initial penetration of the periderm and leaf traces by N. galligena and the early disease symptom. Methods Single ascospore isolates of N. galligena, obtained from perithecia on cankered Populus tremuloides in Manitoba, were maintained on PDA-V/S juice agar. A water suspension of conidia obtained from a pure culture served as inoculum. This was prepared by adding 25 ml of sterilized distilled water to cover the entire surface of a culture in a standard Petri plate. The water was agitated to dislodge the spores and decanted into a beaker. Twelve suckers of 9-month-old aspen and seven of 6-month-old peach leaf willow were obtained from rooted cuttings and maintained in fiats in the greenhouse. The inoculations were made on six dates beginning June 17, 1964, by placing a few milliliters of spore suspension in parafilm funnels (Zalasky 1964) placed on the lower half of the main stem of aspen or on branches of peachleaf willow that had mature periderm. Either the bark alone or the bark and the base of a petiole were immersed. Sterile distilled water was used as a control, and all the funnels were r filled daily for 7 days. The treated plants were maintained up to 11 months after inoculation. Isolations of the fungus from inoculation sites were made 'aseptically' by removing a thin upper layer of infected periderm that had been surface sterilized and rinsed with sterile distilled water. If discolored lesions had formed, the inner tissues of lesions were aseptically transferred to PDA-V/S juice agar. Penetration and initial establishment of the fungus in both hosts were studied using histological methods previously described (Zalasky 1964). The samples were collected periodically, the first sample of willow 15 days, and of aspen 30 days after inoculation. Results Stem infections occurred in 9 out of 13 funnels on aspen, and 6 out of 20 funnels on peachleaf willow. Four suberized cankers, one of periderm and three of leaf trace origin, and numerous

2 58 CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY. VOL. 46, 1968 TABLE I Infections caused by Nectria galligena in Populus tremuloides and Salix amygdaloides Funnel inoculations Infections per funnel No. Host Date No. controls Date collected Remarks ---_._- Aspen June 17, July 7, Oct. 8, Nov. 9, Peach- Nov. 9, leaf Nov. 25, willow May 6, periderm lesions Sept. 23, periderm lesions Nov. 24, 1964 Isolations positive Nov. 24, 1964 Isolations failed Dec. 8, periderm lesions Jan. 26, periderm lesions Dec. 8, periderm lesions May 6, 1964 No periderm lesions periderm lesions occurred on aspen; but only one canker of leaf trace origin and several periderm lesions occurred on willow. On November 24, 48 days after inoculation of aspen, attempts were made to culture the fungus from lesions in the periderm and bud tissue at each point of inoculation (Table I); Nectria galligena was not isolated from the lesions. Failure of isolation was probably due to excessive excision of the upper layers containing the mycelial elements. However, on November 24, 140 days after inoculation, N. galligena was isolated from lesions on five stem pieces. All of the controls were free of infection. Penetration Distinct lesions on lateral buds and periderm of aspen and peach leaf willow were first observed 15 days after inoculation. Penetration of the petiole had also occurred 15 days after inoculation. Hyphae were observed radiating peric1inally under the phloem, and aggregations of hyaline hyphae (Fig. 3) were formed intracellularly in the region of the phellogen of both hosts. Suberized Canker Symptom in the Periderm and Leaf Trace In the periderm of both hosts, numerous lesions up to 3 mm in diameter appeared as corky layers (Fig. 1, B) that fissured and turned brown to straw-colored. Within the lesion the suberized corky tissue consisted of isolated portions of dead cortex between successive layers of periderm, the uppermost layers of which fissured parallel to the stem axis. The corky tissues usually were 22 cell layers deep and consisted of two or more periderm layers (Fig. 2). Most of the lesions were superficial and remained small but some of them had coalesced and produced a canker (Fig. 4). The callus fold around the periderm canker was not evident during the 11 months because it is only in an advanced canker that the cambium becomes necrotic and all the tissues collapse. The cankers were few, 6 mm in diameter, and internally necrotic to the centrifugal periphery of the phloem. In the leaf trace a few shallow infections resulted in suberized lesions of the cortex but the bud trace and cambium were unaffected. Several cankers were produced in both hosts in which the lesion at the base of the petiole was dark and necrotic. The leaf detached gradually as the infection progressed into the leaf trace. The small canker was dark and necrotic internally and 7 to 9 mm in diameter. It remained nearly circular as it slowly enlarged. The young canker was slightly sunken and bordered by a raised, partly developed callus fold (Fig. 1, A). Near the surface of the cankers, the fungus produced sporodochia. Histology of Periderm and Leal Trace Infection The germ tubes from spores penetrated the periderm and leaf trace directly and produced hyphae which established themselves inter- and intra-cellularly. In advance of the hyphae in the periderm (Fig. 3) meristematic activity was stimulated to a depth of ].l and a series of weak cicatricial zones formed in the inner regions of the cortex. These zones consisted of alternate layers of necrotic or semihyaline cortex, and cork, the cells of which were empty and whose walls were often impregnated with gum. This caused some localized hypertrophy and fissuring. The ramified hyphae in the corky

3 PLATE I FIG. 1. Cross section of I-year-old artificially infected aspen showing canker development 78 days after inoculation. A, Leaf trace; B, periderm infections. FIG. 2. An enlargement of one of the erumpent spots in Fig. I, B showing A, successive periderm formation and B, fissuring.

4 ZALASKY: TREE INFECTION BY NECTRIA 59 FIG. 3. Cross-sectional drawing of bark of peach leaf willow showing establishment of hyphae in the periderm, A; dead and usually empty cortex cells, B; and newly formed periderm in the living cortex, C. FIG. 4. Cross-sectional drawing of an aspen stem 335 days after inoculation showing the inner limits of the periderm canker, A; coalesced fissured lesions, B; living cortex, C; phloem, D; and periderm, E. tissue extended through the weak cicatrical zones and inward to the margin of the phloem. In the leaf trace, the hyphae penetrated the cortex at the base of the petiole and invaded all the tissues of the leaf and bud trace, bark, and pith and grew radially, invading the xylem parenchyma, vessels, and xylem fibers 78 days after inoculation. In response to this invasion, most of the parenchyma cells in the bud trace and pith were converted into sc1ereids. A weak cicatrix extended from the cambium and phloem to the periderm at the callus fold bordering the margin of the canker (Fig. I, A). The fungus continued to invade the sapwood and the cambium behind the callus fold and to spread along the cambium in the peripheral area of the canker. Sporodochia occurred in the cankers near the surface at the points of hypha I aggregations. Discussion Microscopic observations of penetration of uninjured periderm and leaf trace give some understanding of the process of infection by N. galligena in aspen and peachleaf willow. The fungus is able to penetrate the semimature and mature periderm of young trees directly. Many infections result in suberized cankers that are slow to develop and few result in active cankers. In suberized cankers the non-infected cortex and phloem hypertrophy and form healing tissue that soon collapses as a result of the necrosis of cells at the inner margin of the lesion. In active cankers necrosis of the cortex and phloem is more rapid and the canker appears sunken and bordered by a callus fold. Several points of discussion are evident. They concern the slow development of cankers, the funnel method of inoculation, and the importance of suberized cankers at the bases of branches. The weak pathogenicity of N. galligena and its apparent inability to invade the periderm and cortex rapidly indicates that the food reserve is low in these tissues. One would expect a higher food reserve in the cortex but the cells of the cortex soon divide in rapid succession to form a weak cicatrix in advance of the fungus. The cells in the affected cortex are empty before they are colonized. However, the fungus is more active once it advances into the phloem and cambium, where the food reserve of nitrogen is high (Kozlowski 1962). The funnel method of inoculation is subject to criticism especially if a section of young stem is kept immersed for several days. The amount of nutrient leaching could appreciably change the

5 60 CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY. VOL. 46, 1968 natural resistance of the tissues (Tukey and Tukey 1959). Except for the dry spore method of inoculation, all methods requiring the use of free moisture are subject to the above criticism. Sviridova (1960) has shown that rain water washes large quantities of nitrogen and calcium and a much lower amount of potassium from leaves of European aspen. Potassium, in particular, is washed from young leaves in the spring. Leaching losses from very young leaves are small, but increase with leaf maturity and are greatest when leaves approach senescence. Thus, one could speculate that if leaching of nutrients occurs in the bark, the most leaching would occur in the lower, older parts of the tree. This presumably has some stimulus on growth, sporulation, and succession of fungi on the surface of the bark. The differing rates of leaf scar healing may explain why infected leaf scars either develop immediately into cankers or are confined by suberized lesions. Cankers develop readily in slow-healing leaf scars or in leaf scars with an impaired healing capacity. Lesions in faster healing leaf scars suberize and develop into cankers gradually. This enables some of the buds in the leaf axis to develop and produce small or partly developed branches which die eventually as a result of gradual girdling by a basal canker. Acknowledgment I thank Prof. D. W. French and Dr. P. Manion, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Dr. A. Funk, Forest Research Laboratory, Victoria, B.c., for their interest and critical review of the manuscript. BOYCE, J. S Forest Pathology. 3rd ed. McGraw Hill Book Co., New York. BRANDT, R. W Nectria canker of hardwoods. U.S. Dept. Agr. Forest Pest Leaflet 84, pp CROWDY, S. H Observations on apple canker. IV. The infection of leaf scars. Ann. Appl. BioI. 39: GOETHE, R Weitere Mitteilungen ueber den Krebs der apfelbaume. Landwirt. Jahrb. 2: KOZLOWSKI, T. T Tree growth. 2nd ed. The Ronald Press Company, New York. LORTIE, E. M The Nectria canker and its incitant. Dissertation Abstr. 23: SVIRlDOVA,1. K Results of a study of the washing of nitrogen and ash elements from the crowns of trees by rain. Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR, 133: TUKEY, H. B. and TUKEY, H. B Practical implications of nutrient losses from plant foliage by leaching. Am. Soc. Hort. Sci. 74: WILTSHIRE, S. P Studies on the apple canker fungus. 1. Leaf scar infection. Ann. Appl. BioI. 8: ZALASKY, H The histopathology of Macrophoma tumefaciens infections in black poplar. Can. J. Botany 42:

Cankers. FRST 307 Fall 2017

Cankers. FRST 307 Fall 2017 Cankers FRST 307 Fall 2017 www.forestryimages.org Website maintained by the Warnell School of Forestry at the University of Georgia, USA Unlike google images, this website is curated and accurate call

More information

Bacterial stem canker

Bacterial stem canker Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 10 (Second Edition 2009) Bacterial stem canker M. Dick (Revised by M.A. Dick) Causal organism Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae van Hall 1902 Fig. 1 - Large resinous

More information

Fruit rot of tomato caused by Gilbertella persicaria.

Fruit rot of tomato caused by Gilbertella persicaria. Fruit rot of tomato caused by Gilbertella persicaria. M. Das Mehrotra *). With Plate I II. A storage rot of tomato fruits caused by Gilbertella persicaria var. indica Mehrotra & Mehrotra, was observed

More information

Legume ipmpipe Diagnostic Pocket Series Anthracnose Colletotrichum lindemuthianum (on beans and lentil), C. gloeosporioides (on pea)

Legume ipmpipe Diagnostic Pocket Series Anthracnose Colletotrichum lindemuthianum (on beans and lentil), C. gloeosporioides (on pea) Anthracnose Colletotrichum lindemuthianum (on beans and lentil), C. gloeosporioides (on pea) FIGURE 1 FIGURE 2 FIGURE 3 Anthracnose Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, C. gloeosporioides AUTHORS: H.F. Schwartz

More information

Twig Die-Back of Tea Caused by. Macrophoma theicola in Taiwan*

Twig Die-Back of Tea Caused by. Macrophoma theicola in Taiwan* Twig Die-Back of Tea Caused by Macrophoma theicola in Taiwan* Jee-song CHEN**, Fang-ming THSENG** and Wen-hsiung Ko*** Abstract Dead twigs of unknown cause standing among healthy twigs with normal green

More information

Nectria flute canker

Nectria flute canker Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 23 (Second Edition 2009) Nectria flute canker M.A. Dick (Revised by A.J.M Hopkins and M.A. Dick) Causal organism Neonectria fuckeliana (C. Booth) Castlebury & Rossman

More information

Plane Tree Anthracnose (Gnomonia Veneta)

Plane Tree Anthracnose (Gnomonia Veneta) Plane Tree Anthracnose (Gnomonia Veneta) Symptoms Anthracnose is a fungal disease that affects Platanus species worldwide, it causes foliar and twig damage in early and mid season. The disease alters twig

More information

Canker Diseases in California Lodi Grape Day 2017 W. D. GUBLER DEPARTMENT OF PLANT PATHOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS, CA 95616

Canker Diseases in California Lodi Grape Day 2017 W. D. GUBLER DEPARTMENT OF PLANT PATHOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS, CA 95616 Canker Diseases in California Lodi Grape Day 2017 W. D. GUBLER DEPARTMENT OF PLANT PATHOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS, CA 95616 Trunk diseases Natural dieback of pruning wound Uniform color of

More information

Recognizing Diseases of Pecan. Jason Brock Dept. of Plant Pathology University of Georgia Tifton, GA

Recognizing Diseases of Pecan. Jason Brock Dept. of Plant Pathology University of Georgia Tifton, GA Recognizing Diseases of Pecan Jason Brock Dept. of Plant Pathology University of Georgia Tifton, GA Benefits to Disease Recognition Better disease management Proper fungicide selection Make adjustments

More information

Peach and Nectarine Cork Spot: A Review of the 1998 Season

Peach and Nectarine Cork Spot: A Review of the 1998 Season Peach and Nectarine Cork Spot: A Review of the 1998 Season Kevin R. Day Tree Fruit Farm Advisor Tulare County University of California Cooperative Extension Along with many other problems, fruit corking

More information

Plants in the Apiaceae (parsley family)

Plants in the Apiaceae (parsley family) May/June 2012 In This Issue: Foliar Diseases of Apiaceae Crops in Coastal California FOLIAR DISEASES OF APIACEAE CROPS IN COASTAL CALIFORNIA Carolee Bull, USDA-ARS, Salinas Steven Koike, UC Cooperative

More information

Botrytis Fruit Rot / Gray Mold on Strawberry

Botrytis Fruit Rot / Gray Mold on Strawberry Botrytis Fruit Rot / Gray Mold on Strawberry Disease Botrytis rot, or gray mold as it is often called, is a serious disease in all strawberry production areas and is a disease of concern in most years.

More information

Mathur Agar This medium is made up of the following reagents: dextrose, magnesium sulfate, potassium phosphate, neopeptone, yeast extract, and agar.

Mathur Agar This medium is made up of the following reagents: dextrose, magnesium sulfate, potassium phosphate, neopeptone, yeast extract, and agar. Inoculum inoculation and media preparation of anthracnose, caused by Colletotrichum lindemuthuianum Halima E. Awale, Michigan State University, EL, MI 48824 Depending on the race of anthracnose you are

More information

A Preliminary Report on a Method of Biological Control of the Chestnut Blight Not Involving the Use of a Hypovirulent Strain of Endothia parasitica

A Preliminary Report on a Method of Biological Control of the Chestnut Blight Not Involving the Use of a Hypovirulent Strain of Endothia parasitica A Preliminary Report on a Method of Biological Control of the Chestnut Blight Not Involving the Use of a Hypovirulent Strain of Endothia parasitica W. H. Weidlich Department of Botany & Plant Pathology,

More information

7.22b Celery stalkworm; larva; actual size 25 mm. 8.1a Bacterial leaf spot (peppery leaf spot); lesions on Brussels sprouts.

7.22b Celery stalkworm; larva; actual size 25 mm. 8.1a Bacterial leaf spot (peppery leaf spot); lesions on Brussels sprouts. 7.22b Celery stalkworm; larva; actual size 25 mm. 8.1a Bacterial leaf spot (peppery leaf spot); lesions on Brussels sprouts. 8.1b Bacterial leaf spot (peppery leaf spot); lesions on a cauliflower leaf.

More information

Pomegranate Diseases: What do we know and where are we heading? Achala KC and Gary Vallad FPA Grower s Meeting Wimauma, FL 03/04/2016

Pomegranate Diseases: What do we know and where are we heading? Achala KC and Gary Vallad FPA Grower s Meeting Wimauma, FL 03/04/2016 Pomegranate Diseases: What do we know and where are we heading? Achala KC and Gary Vallad FPA Grower s Meeting Wimauma, FL 03/04/2016 Contents Major diseases of pomegranate in Florida Anthracnose (Colletotrichum

More information

Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 22 (Second Edition 2010) Lupin blight. Monique Williams

Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 22 (Second Edition 2010) Lupin blight. Monique Williams Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 22 (Second Edition 2010) Lupin blight Monique Williams (Revised by M.A. Dick) Fig. 1 - Shoot of Lupinus arboreus showing crooked and twisted tip caused by Colletotrichum

More information

GUIDE FOR IDENTIFICATION OF IMPORTANT DISEASES IN STRAWBERRY IN CALIFORNIA

GUIDE FOR IDENTIFICATION OF IMPORTANT DISEASES IN STRAWBERRY IN CALIFORNIA GUIDE FOR IDENTIFICATION OF IMPORTANT DISEASES IN STRAWBERRY IN CALIFORNIA Anthracnose Angular Leaf Spot Leaf Blotch and Stem-end Rot Gray Mold Powdery Mildew Phytophthora Crown Rot Verticillium Wilt W.

More information

Recognizing and Managing Blueberry Diseases

Recognizing and Managing Blueberry Diseases Recognizing and Managing Blueberry Diseases 2016 Mississippi Blueberry Education Workshop Hattiesburg, Mississippi January 14, 2016 Rebecca A. Melanson, Extension Plant Pathologist Central MS Research

More information

Diagnosing Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Ned Tisserat & Whitney Cranshaw Colorado State University

Diagnosing Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Ned Tisserat & Whitney Cranshaw Colorado State University Diagnosing Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Ned Tisserat & Whitney Cranshaw Colorado State University Thousand cankers disease (TCD) is a newly recognized disease of various species of walnut (Juglans).

More information

AGRABLAST and AGRABURST TREATMENT OF COFFEE FUNGUS AND BLACK SIGATOKA ON BANANAS

AGRABLAST and AGRABURST TREATMENT OF COFFEE FUNGUS AND BLACK SIGATOKA ON BANANAS AGRABLAST and AGRABURST TREATMENT OF COFFEE FUNGUS AND BLACK SIGATOKA ON BANANAS Coffee Leaf Rust is a major problem facing commercial coffee producers mainly in Africa, India, Southeast Asia, South America,

More information

Problems affecting seeds and seedlings

Problems affecting seeds and seedlings Sunflower XIV-14 Key to Field Problems Affecting Sunflowers Frank B. Peairs Problems affecting seeds and seedlings Plants missing or cut at base. Chewing injury may be present on leaves. Damage usually

More information

Canker Diseases of Almond. December 10, 2015

Canker Diseases of Almond. December 10, 2015 Canker Diseases of Almond December 10, 2015 Gabriele Ludwig, Almond Board Speakers Gabriele Ludwig, Almond Board (Moderator) Florent Trouillas, UCCE Plant Pathologist Trunk and Scaffold canker diseases

More information

Citrus. Disease Guide. The Quick ID Guide to Emerging Diseases of Texas Citrus. Citrus. Flash Cards. S. McBride, R. French, G. Schuster and K.

Citrus. Disease Guide. The Quick ID Guide to Emerging Diseases of Texas Citrus. Citrus. Flash Cards. S. McBride, R. French, G. Schuster and K. E-265 1/12 Citrus Flash Cards S. McBride, R. French, G. Schuster and K. Ong Citrus Disease Guide The Quick ID Guide to Emerging Diseases of Texas Citrus The Quick ID Guide to Emerging Diseases of Texas

More information

Diagnosing Vegetable Problems

Diagnosing Vegetable Problems Diagnosing Vegetable Problems by Marianne C. Ophardt WSU Extension Area Educator AGRICULTURE YOUTH & FAMILIES HEALTH ECONOMY ENVIRONMENT ENERGY COMMUNITIES Cucurbits (squash, melons, cukes) Problem:

More information

TEMPERATURE CONDITIONS AND TOLERANCE OF AVOCADO FRUIT TISSUE

TEMPERATURE CONDITIONS AND TOLERANCE OF AVOCADO FRUIT TISSUE California Avocado Society 1961 Yearbook 45: 87-92 TEMPERATURE CONDITIONS AND TOLERANCE OF AVOCADO FRUIT TISSUE C. A. Schroeder and Ernest Kay Professor of Botany. University of California, Los Angeles;

More information

Thyronectria Canker Caused by: Hosts: Symptoms: Prognosis: Management: Prevention: Other information:

Thyronectria Canker Caused by: Hosts: Symptoms: Prognosis: Management: Prevention: Other information: Thyronectria Canker Caused by: the fungus Thyronectria austro-americana Hosts: honey-locust Symptoms: causes girdling branch and trunk cankers that result in branch dieback, reduced foliage, yellowing

More information

Lecture 05 - Diseases of Pomegranate and Papaya

Lecture 05 - Diseases of Pomegranate and Papaya Lecture 05 - Diseases of Pomegranate and Papaya Pomegranate Cercospora fruit Spot: Cercospora sp. The affected fruits showed small irregular black spots, which later on coalesce, into big spots. The diseased

More information

California Certified Strawberry Nurseries: pathogens of regulatory significance for the Santa Maria area

California Certified Strawberry Nurseries: pathogens of regulatory significance for the Santa Maria area California Certified Strawberry Nurseries: pathogens of regulatory significance for the Santa Maria area Heather Scheck Plant Pathologist Santa Barbara Ag Commissioner s Office Strawberry Registration

More information

Cyttaria galls on silver beech

Cyttaria galls on silver beech Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 9 (Second Edition 2009) Cyttaria galls on silver beech P.D. Gadgil (Revised by P.D. Gadgil) Causal organisms Cyttaria gunnii Berkeley Cyttaria nigra Rawlings Cyttaria

More information

THE EFFECT OF GIRDLING ON FRUIT QUALITY, PHENOLOGY AND MINERAL ANALYSIS OF THE AVOCADO TREE

THE EFFECT OF GIRDLING ON FRUIT QUALITY, PHENOLOGY AND MINERAL ANALYSIS OF THE AVOCADO TREE California Avocado Society 1971-72 Yearbook 55: 162-169 THE EFFECT OF GIRDLING ON FRUIT QUALITY, PHENOLOGY AND MINERAL ANALYSIS OF THE AVOCADO TREE E. Lahav Division of Subtropical Horticulture, The Volcani

More information

Diagnosis of Wood Canker Causing Pathogens in Dried Plum

Diagnosis of Wood Canker Causing Pathogens in Dried Plum Diagnosis of Wood Canker Causing Pathogens in Dried Plum Themis J. Michailides David Morgan, Ryan Puckett, and Daniel Felts University of California, Davis Kearney Agricultural Research & Extension Center

More information

Screening the susceptibility of some sweet cherry cultivars to Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae isolates by immature fruitlet test

Screening the susceptibility of some sweet cherry cultivars to Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae isolates by immature fruitlet test COST FA1104 Screening the susceptibility of some sweet cherry cultivars to Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae isolates by immature fruitlet test Hatice Ozaktan Mustafa Akbaba University of Ege, Faculty

More information

The Biology and Epidemiology of Fire Blight

The Biology and Epidemiology of Fire Blight The Biology and Epidemiology of Fire Blight Paul W. Steiner, Professor & Extension Fruit Pathologist Department of Natural Resource Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 (Presented at

More information

GROWTH RATES OF RIPE ROT FUNGI AT DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES

GROWTH RATES OF RIPE ROT FUNGI AT DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES : 77-84 GROWTH RATES OF RIPE ROT FUNGI AT DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES T.A. Elmsly and J. Dixon Avocado Industry Council Ltd., P.O. Box 13267, Tauranga 3110 Corresponding author: tonielmsly@nzavaocado.co.nz

More information

Plant Disease and Insect Advisory

Plant Disease and Insect Advisory Plant Disease and Insect Advisory Entomology and Plant Pathology Oklahoma State University 127 Noble Research Center Stillwater, OK 74078 Vol. 7, No. 30 http://entoplp.okstate.edu/pddl/ July 28, 2008 Bacterial

More information

ABSTRACT. areas of Michigan. Clones of P.tremuloides in northern areas

ABSTRACT. areas of Michigan. Clones of P.tremuloides in northern areas Resistance Variation in Resistance of Trembling Aspen to Hypoxylon mammatum Identified by Inoculating Naturally Occurring Clones John R. French and John H. Hart Graduate Student and Professor, respectively,

More information

STEM-END ROTS : INFECTION OF RIPENING FRUIT

STEM-END ROTS : INFECTION OF RIPENING FRUIT 1 STEM-END ROTS : INFECTION OF RIPENING FRUIT K.R. EVERETT The Horticulture and Food Research Institute of New Zealand Ltd. Private Bag 919, Mt Albert, Auckland ABSTRACT Fruit from an unsprayed orchard

More information

25.1 Bacterial canker; wilted plants; see also 18.1a-c Bacterial stem rot; petiole and leaf symptoms.

25.1 Bacterial canker; wilted plants; see also 18.1a-c Bacterial stem rot; petiole and leaf symptoms. 25.1 Bacterial canker; wilted plants; see also 18.1a-c. 25.3 Bacterial stem rot; petiole and leaf symptoms. 25.4a Pith necrosis; plant, showing chlorosis and wilt. 25.4b Pith necrosis; brown lesion on

More information

Bacterial canker of sweet cherry in Oregon Disease symptoms, cycle, and management

Bacterial canker of sweet cherry in Oregon Disease symptoms, cycle, and management E M 9 0 0 7 - M M a y 2 0 1 0 Bacterial canker of sweet cherry in Oregon Disease symptoms, cycle, and management Robert A. Spotts, Jeff Olsen, Lynn Long, and Jay W. Pscheidt Contents Introduction Cause

More information

Janice Y. Uchida Department of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences University of Hawaii at Manoa

Janice Y. Uchida Department of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences University of Hawaii at Manoa Janice Y. Uchida Department of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences University of Hawaii at Manoa Phytophthora species Some of the most destructive pathogens The genus has a very wide host range;

More information

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C Price 10 cents Stock Number

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C Price 10 cents Stock Number For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price 10 cents Stock Number 0101-0222 BUTTERNUT (Juglans cinerea L.) James G. Schroeder 1 DISTRIBUTION

More information

SYMPTOMS OF CONTROLLED ATMOSPHERE DAMAGE IN AVOCADOS

SYMPTOMS OF CONTROLLED ATMOSPHERE DAMAGE IN AVOCADOS SYMPTOMS OF CONTROLLED ATMOSPHERE DAMAGE IN AVOCADOS C. YEARSLEY AND N. LALLU HortResearch, Private Bag 92 169, Auckland ABSTRACT Fruit quality following CA shipping has been variable with the appearance

More information

Further investigations into the rind lesion problems experienced with the Pinkerton cultivar

Further investigations into the rind lesion problems experienced with the Pinkerton cultivar Further investigations into the rind lesion problems experienced with the Pinkerton cultivar FJ Kruger and SD Mhlophe Agricultural Research Council Institute for Tropical and Subtropical Crops Private

More information

Biological control of Grapevine Trunk Diseases: A South African perspective

Biological control of Grapevine Trunk Diseases: A South African perspective WG4 Meeting COST Action FA1303 Sustainable control of GTDs Logroño, Spain, 6 & 7 October 2016 Management of GTDs in nurseries and in the vineyard Biocontrol agents Biological control of Grapevine Trunk

More information

In 2015, low temperatures occurred

In 2015, low temperatures occurred FARM ADVISORS Pinot Leaf Curl Rhonda J. Smith and Larry J. Bettiga UC Cooperative Extension Viticulture Farm Advisors, Sonoma and Monterey Counties; and Douglas O. Adams, Department of Viticulture and

More information

Organic viticulture research in Pennsylvania. Jim Travis, Bryan Hed, and Noemi Halbrendt Department of Plant Pathology Penn State University

Organic viticulture research in Pennsylvania. Jim Travis, Bryan Hed, and Noemi Halbrendt Department of Plant Pathology Penn State University Organic viticulture research in Pennsylvania Jim Travis, Bryan Hed, and Noemi Halbrendt Department of Plant Pathology Penn State University Organic production in the US; 1 st national certified organic

More information

Cladosporium caryigenum, (prev. Fusicladium effusum, Cladosporium effusum)

Cladosporium caryigenum, (prev. Fusicladium effusum, Cladosporium effusum) Pecan plantdiseasehandbook.tamu.edu/food-crops/nut-crops/pecan/ Carya illinoensis Scab Cladosporium caryigenum, (prev. Fusicladium effusum, Cladosporium effusum), nuts and green twigs Small, circular,

More information

ARBORICULTURE JOURNAL OF CONTROL OF DIPLODIA AND DOTHISTROMA BLIGHTS OF PINES IN THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT. by Glenn W. Peterson

ARBORICULTURE JOURNAL OF CONTROL OF DIPLODIA AND DOTHISTROMA BLIGHTS OF PINES IN THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT. by Glenn W. Peterson JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE January 1981 Vol. 7, No. 1 CONTROL OF DIPLODIA AND DOTHISTROMA BLIGHTS OF PINES IN THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT by Glenn W. Peterson Diplodia tip blight and Dothistroma needle blight

More information

THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE AND WALNUT TWIG BEETLE IN A THREE YEAR OLD ORCHARD, SOLANO COUNTY

THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE AND WALNUT TWIG BEETLE IN A THREE YEAR OLD ORCHARD, SOLANO COUNTY THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE AND WALNUT TWIG BEETLE IN A THREE YEAR OLD ORCHARD, SOLANO COUNTY Carolyn DeBuse, Andrew Johnson, Stacy Hishinuma, Steve Seybold, Rick Bostock, and Tatiana Roubtsova ABSTRACT Some

More information

Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut

Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Richard Bostock Dept. of Plant Pathology, UC Davis Current Issues in Invasive and Emerging Pests and Diseases February 5, 2014 An epidemic in eastern black walnut, Juglans

More information

2015 Florida Plant Disease Management Guide: Strawberry 1

2015 Florida Plant Disease Management Guide: Strawberry 1 PDMG-V3-50 2015 Florida Plant Disease Guide: Strawberry 1 Natalia A. Peres 2 Alternaria Rot Alternaria rot, caused by Alternaria tenuissima, occurs infrequently and is usually not important in most strawberry-growing

More information

Blueberry. Diseases Guide

Blueberry. Diseases Guide Blueberry Diseases Guide Blueberry Diseases Guide Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, (2016) AAFC No. 12475E ISBN 978-0-660-04178-0 Catalogue

More information

Common Name: BUTTERNUT

Common Name: BUTTERNUT Common Name: BUTTERNUT Scientific Name: Juglans cinerea Linnaeus Other Commonly Used Names: white walnut, oilnut Previously Used Scientific Names: Wallia cinerea (Linnaeus) Alefeld Family: Juglandaceae

More information

GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE AVOCADO FRUIT

GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE AVOCADO FRUIT California Avocado Society 1958 Yearbook 42: 114-118 GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE AVOCADO FRUIT C. A. Schroeder Associate Professor Subtropical Horticulture, University of California at Los Angeles. The

More information

Post harvest diseases in Apple, Mango, Banana Citrus, Grapes and Papaya

Post harvest diseases in Apple, Mango, Banana Citrus, Grapes and Papaya Post harvest diseases in Apple, Mango, Banana Citrus, Grapes and Papaya Post Harvest diseases of Apple 1. Apple scab : Venturia inaequalis 2. Bitter rot : Glomerella cingulata 3. Blue mould / Green mould

More information

Peanut disease photos

Peanut disease photos NC STATE UNIVERSITY Department of Plant Pathology Peanut disease photos Disease page Disease page Aspergillus crown rot 2 Web blotch 17 Spotted wilt 3-4 Root-knot nematodes 18 Leaf spots 5-7 Rhizoctonia

More information

Fungal Fungal Disease Citrus Black Black Spot Guignardia Guignardia citricarpa ): Id I entifi f catio ion io, Biology Biology and and Control

Fungal Fungal Disease Citrus Black Black Spot Guignardia Guignardia citricarpa ): Id I entifi f catio ion io, Biology Biology and and Control Fungal Disease Citrus Black Spot (Guignardia citricarpa): ) Identification, i io Biology and Control Drs. Megan Dewdney and Natalia Peres Causal agent: Guignardia citricarpa Asexual name: Phyllosticta

More information

Project Justification: Objectives: Accomplishments:

Project Justification: Objectives: Accomplishments: Spruce decline in Michigan: Disease Incidence, causal organism and epidemiology MDRD Hort Fund (791N6) Final report Team leader ndrew M Jarosz Team members: Dennis Fulbright, ert Cregg, and Jill O Donnell

More information

Peach rust caused by the fungus Tranzschelia discolor (Fuckel) Tranz. and Lit.

Peach rust caused by the fungus Tranzschelia discolor (Fuckel) Tranz. and Lit. PUBLICATION 8011 Peach Rust Caused by Tranzschelia discolor in California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Agriculture and Natural Resources http://anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu J. E. ADASKAVEG, Associate Professor;

More information

As callus tissue develops around the dead area, the sunken

As callus tissue develops around the dead area, the sunken Figure 84.-A maple stem. target-shaped Nectria canker on a sugar Coral spot canker. Coral spot canker (Nectria cinnabarina) is common on sugar maple and other hardwood trees. t usually attacks only dead

More information

THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE of WALNUT: STATUS in CALIFORNIA

THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE of WALNUT: STATUS in CALIFORNIA THOUSAND CANKERS DISEASE of WALNUT: STATUS in CALIFORNIA Janine Hasey UC Cooperative Extension, Sutter & Yuba cos. Steve Seybold USDA Forest Service, Davis THOUSAND CANKERS Insect-vectored disease on walnut

More information

MONITORING WALNUT TWIG BEETLE ACTIVITY IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY: OCTOBER 2011-OCTOBER 2012

MONITORING WALNUT TWIG BEETLE ACTIVITY IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY: OCTOBER 2011-OCTOBER 2012 MONITORING WALNUT TWIG BEETLE ACTIVITY IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY: OCTOBER 11-OCTOBER 12 Elizabeth J. Fichtner ABSTRACT Walnut twig beetle, Pityophthorus juglandis, is the vector of thousand cankers

More information

Fungus Di Di f seases o Fruiting Plants

Fungus Di Di f seases o Fruiting Plants Fungus Diseases of Fruiting Plants How diseases spread Sanitation is essential in the prevention and control of Sanitation is essential in the prevention and control of diseases in the landscape! Fungus

More information

Vegetable Diseases Caused by Phytophthora capsici in Florida 1

Vegetable Diseases Caused by Phytophthora capsici in Florida 1 PP-176 Vegetable Diseases Caused by Phytophthora capsici in Florida 1 Pamela D. Roberts, Amanda J. Gevens, Robert J. McGovern, and Thomas A. Kucharek 2 Disease outbreaks caused by the oomycete fungal-like

More information

The Pomology Post. Hull Rot Management on Almonds. by Brent Holtz, Ph.D., University of California Pomology Advisor

The Pomology Post. Hull Rot Management on Almonds. by Brent Holtz, Ph.D., University of California Pomology Advisor University of California Cooperative Extension The Pomology Post Madera County Volume 54, JUNE 2007 Hull Rot Management on Almonds by Brent Holtz, Ph.D., University of California Pomology Advisor Many

More information

IDENTIFICATION AND CONTROL OF CANKERS CAUSED BY NECTRIA CINNABARINA OF HONEY LOCUST

IDENTIFICATION AND CONTROL OF CANKERS CAUSED BY NECTRIA CINNABARINA OF HONEY LOCUST 33 JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE February 1984 Vol. 10, No. 2 IDENTIFICATION AND CONTROL OF CANKERS CAUSED BY NECTRIA CINNABARINA OF HONEY LOCUST by P.J. Bedker and R.A. Blanchette Cultivars of thornless honey

More information

New Disease in Oklahoma: Blackleg of Canola

New Disease in Oklahoma: Blackleg of Canola Entomology and Plant Pathology, Oklahoma State University 127 Noble Research Center, Stillwater, OK 74078 405.744.5527 Vol. 8, No. 33 http://entoplp.okstate.edu/pddl/ Dec 4, 2009 New Disease in Oklahoma:

More information

PEACH BLOSSOM BLIGHT Biology, Control, and Fungicide Resistance Management

PEACH BLOSSOM BLIGHT Biology, Control, and Fungicide Resistance Management PEACH BLOSSOM BLIGHT Biology, Control, and Fungicide Resistance Management Norman Lalancette Specialist in Tree Fruit Pathology Rutgers University Agricultural Research and Extension Center Bridgeton,

More information

Citrus Health Response Program

Citrus Health Response Program PATHOLOGY TRAINING Citrus Health Response Program Objectives: 1. To learn about Citrus Canker A. Identifying citrus canker leaf suspects. B. Identifying i citrus canker fruit suspects. 2. To compare Citrus

More information

PREDICTING AVOCADO FRUIT ROTS BY QUANTIFYING INOCU- LUM POTENTIAL IN THE ORCHARD BEFORE HARVEST

PREDICTING AVOCADO FRUIT ROTS BY QUANTIFYING INOCU- LUM POTENTIAL IN THE ORCHARD BEFORE HARVEST Proceedings V World Avocado Congress (Actas V Congreso Mundial del Aguacate) 3. pp. 61-66. PREDICTING AVOCADO FRUIT ROTS BY QUANTIFYING INOCU- LUM POTENTIAL IN THE ORCHARD BEFORE HARVEST K.R. Everett 1,

More information

viti-notes [pests and diseases] Eutypa dieback

viti-notes [pests and diseases] Eutypa dieback viti-notes [pests and diseases] Eutypa dieback Viti-note Summary: Damage and loss Conditions favouring spore production Life cycle and disease development Susceptibility Other host species Symptoms and

More information

Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut

Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Thousand Cankers Disease of Walnut Richard Bostock Dept. of Plant Pathology, UC Davis Current Issues in Invasive and Emerging Pests and Diseases February 5, 2014 An epidemic in eastern black walnut, Juglans

More information

Beech Bark Disease. Forest Insect & Disease Leaflet 75. U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service. History and Distribution

Beech Bark Disease. Forest Insect & Disease Leaflet 75. U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service. History and Distribution Forest Insect & Disease Leaflet 75 U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service Beech Bark Disease David R. Houston 1 and James T. O'Brien 2 1 Principal Plant Pathologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture,

More information

Produce Specifications

Produce Specifications DISORDER Brown With golden brown to brown skin; white, semi translucent flesh. Well-formed shape with smooth double layer of papery skin covering the overlapping concentric layers of flesh; remnant cut

More information

Major seed-borne diseases in Indonesia. A.S. Duriat & J.M. van der Wolf

Major seed-borne diseases in Indonesia. A.S. Duriat & J.M. van der Wolf Major seed-borne diseases in Indonesia A.S. Duriat & J.M. van der Wolf Lay-out Conclusions from the survey Management of major seed-borne pathogens Major fungal diseases on hot pepper Field Seed Pathogen

More information

THE THREAT: The disease leads to dieback in shoots and fruiting buds and an overall decline in walnut tree health.

THE THREAT: The disease leads to dieback in shoots and fruiting buds and an overall decline in walnut tree health. Taking Control of Botryosphaeria in California Walnut Orchards Summary THE ISSUES: Botryosphaeria, or Bot, is a fungal disease that spreads by spores that germinate and enter the tree through existing

More information

Ceratocystis fimbriata a new fungal pathogen of kiwifruit in Brazil

Ceratocystis fimbriata a new fungal pathogen of kiwifruit in Brazil Ceratocystis fimbriata a new fungal pathogen of kiwifruit in Brazil Joy Tyson, Mike Manning KiwiNet Workshop, Mount Maunganui, New Zealand. 9 December 2015. Background Ceratocystis fimbriata» Fungus first

More information

WEINGARTNER, David Peter, STUDIES OF CANKER AND STEM BLIGHT DISEASES OF HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY fvaccinium CORYMBOSUM L.) IN MICHIGAN.

WEINGARTNER, David Peter, STUDIES OF CANKER AND STEM BLIGHT DISEASES OF HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY fvaccinium CORYMBOSUM L.) IN MICHIGAN. 69-20,954 WEINGARTNER, David Peter, 1939- STUDIES OF CANKER AND STEM BLIGHT DISEASES OF HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY fvaccinium CORYMBOSUM L.) IN MICHIGAN. Michigan State University, Ph.D., 1969 Agriculture, plant

More information

THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY II6b. cop-el A6RIGULTUBAL UIBABY

THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY II6b. cop-el A6RIGULTUBAL UIBABY THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY 650.7 II6b cop-el A6RIGULTUBAL UIBABY \ UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Agricultural Experiment Station BULLETIN No. 229 DENDROPHOMA LEAF BLIGHT OF STRAWBERRY BY H. W. ANDEHSON

More information

Lecture 4. Factors affecting ripening can be physiological, physical, or biotic. Fruit maturity. Temperature.

Lecture 4. Factors affecting ripening can be physiological, physical, or biotic. Fruit maturity. Temperature. Lecture 4. Factors affecting ripening can be physiological, physical, or biotic. Physiological factors relate to fruit maturity or environmental factors, which affect the metabolism of fruit and banana.

More information

Brown Rot. Symptoms. Blossoms. Stem Cankers. Department of Plant Pathology & Physiology Clemson University Clemson, SC 29634

Brown Rot. Symptoms. Blossoms. Stem Cankers. Department of Plant Pathology & Physiology Clemson University Clemson, SC 29634 Brown Rot Phillip M. Brannen Department of Plant Pathology University of Georgia Athens, GA 30602 Guido Schnabel Department of Plant Pathology & Physiology Clemson University Clemson, SC 29634 Monilinia

More information

Western Gall Rust. Forest Health Management, Rocky Mountain Region. Introduction. Range and Hosts. David W. Johnson

Western Gall Rust. Forest Health Management, Rocky Mountain Region. Introduction. Range and Hosts. David W. Johnson Forest Health Management, Rocky Mountain Region Western Gall Rust David W. Johnson Introduction Western gall rust is a disease of hard pines that is caused by a fungus which causes formation of galls on

More information

1997 RUTGERS Turfgrass Proceedings

1997 RUTGERS Turfgrass Proceedings 1997 RUTGERS Turfgrass Proceedings Rutgers University THE NEW JERSEY TURFGRASS ASSOCIATION In Cooperation With RUTGERS COOPERATIVE EXTENSION NEW JERSEY AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION RUTGERS, THE STATE

More information

STUDIES IN FOREST PATHOLOGY

STUDIES IN FOREST PATHOLOGY +1 Agriculture Canada Canadian Agriculture Library Bibliotheque canadienne de I'agriculture Ottawa K1 A 0C5 PUBLICATION 691 ISSUED MARCH, 1940 TECHNICAL BULLETIN 27 FIRST PRINTING DOMINION OF CANADA DEPARTMENT

More information

Reevaluation of Phomopsis species affecting sunflowers in the United States

Reevaluation of Phomopsis species affecting sunflowers in the United States Reevaluation of Phomopsis species affecting sunflowers in the United States Febina Mathew, Erik Heitkamp, Sam Markell, Kholoud Alananbeh, Nikolay Balbyshev, Lisa Castlebury, and Thomas Gulya Phomopsis

More information

Downy Mildew Confirmed in Ohio Cucumbers

Downy Mildew Confirmed in Ohio Cucumbers VegNet Vol. 13, No. 10. July 6, 2006 Ohio State University Extension Vegetable Crops On the WEB at: http://vegnet.osu.edu If experiencing problems receiving this fax, Call 614-292-3857 In This Issue 1.

More information

What Lurks in Your Canola Field: Disease Surveys of Debra McLaren & Anastasia Kubinec AAFC-Brandon and MAFRI-Carman

What Lurks in Your Canola Field: Disease Surveys of Debra McLaren & Anastasia Kubinec AAFC-Brandon and MAFRI-Carman What Lurks in Your Canola Field: Disease Surveys of 2009 Debra McLaren & Anastasia Kubinec AAFC-Brandon and MAFRI-Carman Studies / Collaborators Survey of Canola Diseases in Manitoba Surveillance and dispersal

More information

Grapevine Trunk Diseases

Grapevine Trunk Diseases Grapevine Trunk Diseases Grape Camp Nov. 2, 2015 Lady Bird Johnson Park Fredericksburg, TX David Appel, Professor Dept. of Plant Pathology and Microbiology Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843

More information

MSU Extension Publication Archive. Scroll down to view the publication.

MSU Extension Publication Archive. Scroll down to view the publication. MSU Extension Publication Archive Archive copy of publication, do not use for current recommendations. Up-to-date information about many topics can be obtained from your local Extension office. Spraying

More information

Topics to be covered: What Causes Fruit to Rot? Powdery Mildew. Black Rot. Black Rot (Continued)

Topics to be covered: What Causes Fruit to Rot? Powdery Mildew. Black Rot. Black Rot (Continued) Topics to be covered: Spots, Rots and Where did the grapes go? Identification and Control of Muscadine Diseases Bill Cline, Plant Pathology Department North Carolina State University Horticultural Crops

More information

Butternut and Butternut Canker

Butternut and Butternut Canker Butternut and Butternut Canker Casey Jennings 10 December 2013 Photo: Casey Jennings Introduction Uncommon but valuable species (Rink 1990) Lumber valued for furniture and cabinetry Can be tapped for syrup

More information

Three aspects of resistance to white pine blister rust in California

Three aspects of resistance to white pine blister rust in California Three aspects of resistance to white pine blister rust in California D. R. Vogler, A. Delfino Mix, P. E. Maloney USDA, Forest Service, PSW IFG, & University of California, Davis, CA Topics The nature of

More information

Botryosphaeriaceae and Phomopsis/Diaporthe (P/D) spp. are fungal

Botryosphaeriaceae and Phomopsis/Diaporthe (P/D) spp. are fungal California Avocado Society 2010 Yearbook 93:87-98 Akif Eskalen Extension Subtropical Plant Pathology Specialist Virginia McDonald Assistant Specialist II Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology

More information

Occurrence of Phytophthora root and collar rot disease of kiwifruit orchards in the west part of the Mazandaran Province

Occurrence of Phytophthora root and collar rot disease of kiwifruit orchards in the west part of the Mazandaran Province Scholarly Journal of Agricultural Science Vol. 3(8), pp. 331-335, August 2013 Available online at http:// www.scholarly-journals.com/sjas ISSN 2276-7118 2013 Scholarly-Journals Full Length Research Paper

More information

Cedar-quince rust on juniper- Gymnosporangium clavipes

Cedar-quince rust on juniper- Gymnosporangium clavipes This bulletin from the Cooperative Extension Plant Health Clinic (Plant Disease Clinic) is an electronic update about diseases and other problems observed in our lab each month. Input from everybody interested

More information

DEMONSTRATION OF THE LIFTING POWER OF EVAPORATION.

DEMONSTRATION OF THE LIFTING POWER OF EVAPORATION. DEMONSTRATION OF THE LIFTING POWER OF EVAPORATION. HIRAM P. THUT,. Ohio State University. The lifting power of evaporation and the liquid tension present in water are two important forces in the transpiration

More information

Dothistroma needle blight

Dothistroma needle blight Dothistroma needle blight Forest pathology in New Zealand No. 5 LS Bulman (2008) Based on PD Gadgil (1984) Causal organism Dothistroma septosporum (Dorog.) M. Morelet, previously known in New Zealand as

More information

Plant Disease & Pest Management Guide Edition

Plant Disease & Pest Management Guide Edition Plant Disease & Pest Management Guide 2007 Edition Table of Contents Introduction............... 3 Rust...................... 5 Soybean Cyst Nematode (SCN).......... 7 Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS)...........

More information

ORGANIC MANGO CROP PROTECTION PART-III post harvest care, physiological disorders & micronutrient deficiencies ICCOA, BANGALORE

ORGANIC MANGO CROP PROTECTION PART-III post harvest care, physiological disorders & micronutrient deficiencies ICCOA, BANGALORE ORGANIC MANGO CROP PROTECTION PART-III post harvest care, physiological disorders & micronutrient deficiencies ICCOA, BANGALORE Mango Post-harvest: anthracnose Anthracnose Cause: Colletotrichum gloeosporiodes

More information