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FIRE BLIGHT, (Erwinia amylovora) BACKGROUND Fire blight is a bacterial disease native to North America. It is one of the most serious diseases of fruit trees and shrubs. This disease causes severe blighting on many parts of its host plants including blossoms, leaves, shoots, limbs and fruit. It has a significant impact on the commercial orchard industry and on ornamental plantings. It can occasionally reach epidemic levels. DISTRIBUTION Fire blight is distributed throughout most of North America, most of Europe and in some Middle Eastern countries. HOST SPECIES Fire blight attacks a number of species in the rose family. Preferred hosts include mountain ash, apple, choke cherry, pear, crab apple, hawthorn, Saskatoon and a number of common rose varieties. In Saskatchewan, the most common hosts are crabapple, mountain ash, and cotoneaster. LIFE CYCLE The fire blight bacteria overwinter in live tissue at the margin of cankers on main stems and larger branches. Bacteria become active in the spring when temperatures exceed 18 C. Growth of the bacteria is favored by rain, heavy dew, and high humidity. When trees are blossoming, droplets of bacterial ooze are present on the surface of cankers. This bacterial ooze is spread to open blossoms by rain splash or insects, mostly pollinators such as bees, wasps, ants and flies. The bacteria multiply rapidly in blossom nectar, invade the blossom tissue through nectary glands and cause blossom blight. Further spread of the bacteria from blossom to blossom continues by rain and pollinating insects. The optimum temperature for blossom blight infection is 18 C to 30 C. Later, bacteria moving from infected blossoms within the same blossom-bearing twig can infect developing fruits. New succulent vegetative shoots also become infected early in the growing season from bacteria spread by rain or insects from cankers and infected blossoms. Infection of shoots occurs through mechanical wounds, wounds created by sucking insects or through lenticels and stomata. New shoot infection can be extensive during periods of prolonged rain and high humidity. Within the infected shoot, the bacteria grow rapidly often killing much of the shoot. Bacteria will grow from the infected shoots into woody tissue, where its advancement will slow and cankers will form. The bacteria will then overwinter in these cankers to renew the disease cycle the following spring. In addition to disease spread occurring from the bacterial ooze in the spring, bacteria can grow internally from canker margins into nearby shoots, where they cause systemic infections called canker blights. The bacteria can also grow into the root area and cause a blight. SIGNS, SYMPTOMS AND DAMAGE Fire blight affects many parts of the host plants. Consequently, there are a wide variety of signs/symptoms, which include: - Diseased blossoms become water-soaked, turn black or brown and become wilted. - Infected young fruits appear water soaked, quickly turn brown to black and eventually shrivel up. - Leaves on infected new shoots suddenly turn brown or black, appearing as though they had been scorched by fire. - Infected shoots wilt and often form a shepherd's crook at their tips. - Shoots with canker blight are wilted and yellow-orange in color. - During warm and humid weather, droplets of yellowish-white bacterial ooze may be visible on the surface of cankers and on the blighted shoots and fruit. - Dried up blighted leaves may remain on the tree throughout the winter. - Cankers in the woody tissue appear as dark, water soaked areas that often have cracks in the bark around the margins. - Oozing near the base of the tree can be a sign of infection in the root. Fire blight causes various forms of damage to infected trees including blossom blight, fruit blight, shoot blight, branch and main stem cankers and root blight. This damage can cause severe losses in fruit orchards, nurseries and ornamental plantings. There is direct loss of fruit due to blighting of blossoms and young fruit. Fruit bearing in young trees can be delayed by repeated blighting of shoots. Extensive blighting and dieback of new shoots causes growth loss, is unsightly and can cause tree deformity. Fire blight cankers girdle and kill limbs or entire trees. Root infections can kill trees. Blossom blight Fruit blight with ooze on crabapple Image: University of Georgia Plant Pathology Archive, University of Georgia, Bugwood.org Image: P.G. Psallidas, Benaki Institute, Athens, Bugwood.org 2 Fire blight shepherd’s crook Extensive shoot blight Image: Manitoba Conservation Fire blight canker Image: William Jacobi, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org Image: Claude Moffet, Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service 3 MANAGEMENT PRESCRIPTIONS - - - During the dormant period, cankers should be removed by pruning to reduce sources of infection for the following season. The cankered branch should be pruned about 20 cm below the margin of the canker. In the spring, current season infections should be pruned when first noticed. The punning cut should be about 30 cm below the visible infection. Pruning tools should be disinfected between each cut during the growing season. Bleach or alcohol solutions can be used to disinfest tools. There are chemical products, such as streptomycin and copper compounds, which are registered to protect trees from fire blight infection. These products are for disease prevention and must be applied prior to infection at the time of blossoming. Repeated applications every three days are required throughout the bloom period. REFERENCES FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Fire Blight of Apple and Pear British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture and Lands http://www.agf.gov.bc.ca/cropprot/tfipm/fireblyt.htm#symptoms Fire Blight Cornell University New York State Integrated Pest management Program http://www.nysipm.cornell.edu/factsheets/treefruit/diseases/fb/fb.asp Fire Blight Kearneysville Plant Disease Fact Sheet http://www.caf.wvu.edu/Kearneysville/disease_descriptions/omblight.html 4