* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Plant Diseases
Evolutionary history of plants wikipedia , lookup
Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup
Plant reproduction wikipedia , lookup
History of botany wikipedia , lookup
Venus flytrap wikipedia , lookup
Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup
Plant stress measurement wikipedia , lookup
Plant nutrition wikipedia , lookup
Plant secondary metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup
Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup
Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup
Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup
Plant use of endophytic fungi in defense wikipedia , lookup
Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup
Glossary of plant morphology wikipedia , lookup
Plant Diseases Category E Turf and Ornamentals Pesticide Applicator Training Manual Chapter 5 Terms • Abiotic plant disease—caused by unfavorable growing. • Biotic plant disease —caused by plant pathogens. Category E--- Chapter 12 Soil Fumigation Introduction • Plant disease—a harmful change in the growth of a plant. Abiotic Plant Diseases • Not caused by pathogens • Caused by unfavorable growing conditions – Improper light – Temperature extremes – Mechanical injury • Abiotic diseases lead to stress that can increase susceptibility to damage from insects or pathogenic diseases • Most abiotic plant diseases are avoidable Biotic Plant Diseases • Plant disease triangle • Causal agents: – Fungi – Bacteria – Viruses – Nematodes Causal Agents (Pathogens) • Fungi – Most turf and ornamental disease are caused by fungi – Do not produce their own food – Reproduce by forming spores • Spread – Some by water – Some by wind – Mechanical/animal – Infected plants Causal Agents (Pathogens) • Bacteria – Single celled microbes – Enter plants through injuries or natural openings • Spread – Some by water – Some by wind – Some in soil – Mechanical/animal – Infected plants Causal Agents (Viruses) • Viruses – Smaller than cells---multiply in cells – Often spread – Infected plants must be removed---no cures • Spread – Mechanical---e.g. contaminated equipment – Contact between plants – Sucking insects Susceptible Host Plants • Ornamental plants vary in disease resistance • Susceptibility increases with stress • Symptoms of decline – – – – Late flowering or leaf emergence Smaller leaf size Less shoot growth Excessive water spouts Important Plant Diseases-Turf Brown Patch • Symptoms – Irregular brown areas inches to feet wide – Grass leaves turn olive green then wilt, turn light brown, and die. – Stems and crowns can also be infected • Causes – All grasses susceptible – Caused by Rhizoctonia solani, reside in soil Important Plant Diseases-Turf Brown Patch • Favorable conditions – Excess thatch – High temperatures (75-90 degrees) • Control • Aerate • Water to 4-6 inches depth when needed • Avoid excess nitrogen Important Plant Diseases-Turf Dollar Spot • Symptoms – Small, bleached out or straw-colored spots – Seldom larger than 2 inches in close-mowed turf – On taller grass (1-3 inches) spots can be 3-6 inches in diameter – Spots can merge together – Does not kill the grass plants • Causes – Caused by fungi – indicates Nitrogen deficiency Important Plant Diseases-Turf Leaf Spot • Favorable conditions – Nitrogen deficiency – Warm days with cool nights – High humidity • Control – Adequate nitrogen and potassium – Water in the morning let turf dry out before dusk – Preventative fungicides – Curative fungicides Important Plant Diseases-Turf Leaf Spot • Symptoms – Start as small, dark purple or black spots – Become oval spots with buff centers and purple margins • Causes – Primary cause--- fungus Bipolaris sorokinianum Important Plant Diseases-Turf Leaf Spot • Favorable conditions – Dry periods alternating with cloudy, wet weather • Control – Avoid over-lush turf – Mow so that no more than 1/3 of the leaf blades are cut – Resistant cultivars Important Plant Diseases-Turf Melting-Out • Symptoms – Circular to elongated, purplish or brownish spots – General e.g. spread throughout the grass • Causes – Melting-out is the summer phase of leaf spot – Brent grass, fescues, ryegrass and burmudagrass---fungus Bipolaris sorokinianum Important Plant Diseases-Turf Melting-Out • Control – Reduce shade – Mow at recommended heights – Improve soil aeration Important Plant Diseases-Turf Necrotic Ring Spot • Symptoms – Begins as scattered light green patches 2-6 inches in diameter – Patches enlarge and fade to tan, may become sunken . Streaks or crescents 1-3 or more feet in diameter – Patches can increase over the years • Causes – Fungus Leptosphaeria korrae – Formerly called fusarium blight Important Plant Diseases-Turf Necrotic Ring Spot • Favorable conditions – Cool or mild periods followed by dry, hot conditions – Widespread disease of Kentucky and annual bluegrass that is intensively managed---follows stress • Control – Good cultural practices: aeration, drainage, balance of fertilizers, water in the morning – Resistant cultivars – Systemic fungicides Important Plant Diseases-Turf Pink Snow Mold • Symptoms – Appears first as snow melts – Round, water-soaked spots 1-3 inches in diameter • Causes – Fungi Fusarium nivale or Microdochium nivale – These fungi inactive in warm dry conditions Important Plant Diseases-Turf Pink Snow Mold • Favorable conditions – High humidity and temperatures around 40 degrees • Control – Adequate, balanced fertilizer – Reduce shade – Aeration – Drainage Important Plant Diseases-Turf Powdery Mildew on Turf • Symptoms – Thin, white powdery coating – Lives primarily on outer surfaces • Causes – Fungi Fusarium nivale or Microdochium nivale – These fungi inactive in warm dry conditions Important Plant Diseases-Turf Powdery Mildew on Turf • Favorable conditions – Cool (55-70 degrees) cloudy weather – Important disease on Kentucky bluegrasses during extended periods of low light, especially in areas with poor air circulation • Control – Include shade tolerant cultivars in seed mixtures – Prune trees and shrubs to permit light to reach turf – Deep, infrequent watering Important Plant Diseases-Turf Rust • Symptoms – Begins as light green or yellow flecks becomes – Reddish brown to orange (spores) • Causes – Puccinia species Important Plant Diseases-Turf Rust • Favorable conditions – Cool to warm, moist weather – Dew or condensed moisture on plants for 12 hours • Control – Maintain healthy growth with fertilizer and irrigation – Remove infected portions of leaves with weekly mowing – Curative fungicides Important Plant Diseases-Turf Slime Molds • Symptoms – Slimy masses 1 inch to 2 feet in diameter – Shades of grays and yellow – Easily removable • Causes – Non parasitic on turf---feed on organic matter Important Plant Diseases-Turf Slime Molds • Favorable conditions – Warm, moist weather and high humidity – Spread by winds, water, equipment • Control – Will disappear but can rake or hose-off Important Plant Diseases-Turf Stripe Smut • Symptoms – – – – Long, black stripes (pustules) Grass leaves curl, become shredded and die From a distance appears clumpy and patchy Plants die when hot weather occurs • Causes – Fungus Ustilago striformis often contaminates turf seed – Can remain dormant for 3 years in soil Important Plant Diseases-Turf Stripe Smut • Favorable conditions – Moderate temperatures (50-65 degrees) – Prevalent in spring and fall – Occurs on other grasses but more common on bluegrasses • Control – Resistant cultivars of bluegrass – Seed treatment with fungicides – Dystemic curative fungicides Important Plant Diseases-Turf Fairy Ring • Symptoms – Circular or semi-circular dark green band on turf (released nitrogen from breakdown of organic matter in soil) – Mushrooms will often develop around edge after wet weather • Causes – Several fungi – Occurs in areas with high levels of organic material e.g. thatch Important Plant Diseases-Turf Fairy Ring • Favorable conditions – Presence of high concentrations of organic matter e.g. tree stumps, roots, construction lumber • Control – Remove excess organic matter – Antagonist strains for heavy infestations Important Plant Diseases-Turf Pythium Blight • Symptoms – Large areas can die in 24-48 hours when conditions favoring pythium blight occur – Round to irregular, dark and water-soaked, greasy or slimy – Sunken patches 6-12 inches wide – Reddish brown areas fade to tan and die • Causes – Several species of Pythium fungi Important Plant Diseases-Turf Pythium Blight • Favorable conditions – Temperatures 80-90 degrees with 90% RH (relative humidity) and warm nights (.70 degrees) for most Pythium but some thrive in cool weather – Waterlogged soils with heavy thatch – Excess nitrogen • Control – Improve drainage – Systemic fungicide prior to hot, humid weather Important Plant Diseases-Turf Summer Patch • Symptoms – Bluish-green patches become wilted then die – Patches become circular or crescent-shaped. • Causes – Several species of Pythium fungi Important Plant Diseases-Turf Summer Patch • Favorable conditions – Usually occurs when a wet period follows hot, dry weather – Frequent or excessive watering • Control – Before planting new turf remove stumps and construction material – Avoid mowing or walking on wet turf – Apply systemic fungicides when temperatures reach 70 degrees Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Anthracnose • Symptoms – Leaf buds do not emerge in spring – Defoliation from progressive death of mature leaf tissue along leaf midrib or veins • Causes – Anthracnose in many common tree species – Transitional disease, intermediate between a leaf and stem disease caused by fungi (genus Gnomonia) Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Anthracnose • Favorable conditions – Disease begins in late winter or early spring during periods of warm weather – Splashing of spores during warm. Wet weather spreads the disease • Control – Fungicide application on leaves and buds during emergence – Cultural practices including avoiding planting species that are especially susceptible, maintaining adequate irrigation and fertilization Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Cytospora Canker • Symptoms – Affects poplar and willow – Circular or irregular cankers first appear as brown, sunken areas on younger trees – Cankers often start at wound openings • Causes – Fungus Cytospora chrysosperma Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Cytospora Canker • Favorable conditions – Fungus is opportunistic, infects weakened or wounded tissues – Spread by splashing rain, wind • Control – – – – – Remove dead and dying branches Clean pruning tools Fertilize Deep water (10-12 inches) No fungicides are available Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Dutch Elm Disease • Symptoms – Leaves brown and curl---usually drop early – Large elms may die over 2 or more years • Causes – Fungus Ceratocysitus ulmi – Infects elms and closely related plants – Transmitted by: • Elm bark beetles • Root grafts with adjacent trees • Pruning tools Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Dutch Elm Disease • Control – Plant cultivars with superior resistance (Siberian and Chinese) – Water and fertilize – Spray with appropriate insecticide in late winter/early spring before the buds swell (requires special training and equipment) – Systemic injections – Halt transmission through root grafts (see oak wilt procedures) Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Fire Blight • Symptoms – Infected flowers first appear water-soaked – Leaves and stems then appear brown or black as though scorched by fire • Causes/favorable conditions – Bacterium Erwinia amylovora overwinters in plant tissues and emerges when temps reach 65 degrees – Spread by insects, wind, water, hail Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Fire Blight • Control – Plant resistant varieties of apple, crabapple, and pear where available – Good cultural practices (fertility, watering, drainage) – Prune in dormant season and disinfect tools between cuts with 70% rubbing alcohol solution – 6 inches of mulch around susceptible tress reduces chance of infection Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Fungus Leaf Spot • Symptoms – Difficult to diagnose from anthracnose – Variable spot colors and shapes • Causes – Wide variety of fungi Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Fungus Leaf Spot • Favorable conditions – Cool weather, light rains, high humidity – Crowded plantings • Control – – – – Preventive measures usually not needed Good culture Remove fallen leaves and branches Proper spacing Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Juniper Twig Blight • Symptoms – In spring tips of twigs and branches turn light green then brown – Usually affects branches less than 1/3 inch diameter – Spores emerge during wet weather in spring and early summer • Causes – Fungus Phomopsis juniperova • Controls – Cultural practices – Provide ventilation in shaded areas – Fungicides every 2 weeks early spring to fall Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Oak Wilt • Causes – Fungus Ceratocytis fagacearum – Spread by • beetles from infected plants on their bodies f • Root grafts Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Oak Wilt • Symptoms – Impairs water conduction from roots to branches and leaves – Trees wilt from the top down and leaves wilt from the tips to the base – Fallen leaves have brown tips and green along the main vein Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Oak Wilt • Favorable conditions • Control – Avoid pruning wounding) from April 15 to July 1st if wound occurs during that time cover with tree wound dressing or latex paint---this is the critical period of beetle movement – Isolate infected trees---preventing root grafts--trenching machine or vibratory plow (cut to 4.5-5.0 feet deep) – Red and black oaks most susceptible – Reduce spore quantity---cover pruned wood, debark branches that are 3 inches and over (fungus mats below bark) Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Rust • Symptoms – Bright orange, yellow, chocolate brown or black pustules • Causes – Several fungi • Control – Alternate hosts e.g. junipers and cedars one year,--apple, crabapple, hawthorne, mountain ash the next – Disease free plants – Prune infested tissue Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Scab • Symptoms – Apple scab develops as circular lesions during leaf expansion in spring. Color progresses from dark green to black – Fruit can be infected at any time during development • Cause – Fungus Fusicladium saliciperdum Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Scab • Favorable conditions – Apple scab overwinters on leaf litter – Wet weather during bud break spreads spores – Cool, wet conditions • Control – Plant resistant varieties when available – Prune out diseased tissue – 3-4 applications of fungicides at 10 day intervals starting just before bud break Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Sphaeropsis Blight (Diplodia Tip Blight) • Symptoms – On new, emerging needles browning occurs near the base of the needle and progress to the tip. Ooze forms – Infection spread to twigs and die back to the next whorl – Begins with lower branches and progresses up the tree over successive years – In severe cases the tree dies • Causes – Fungus Sphaeropsis sainea Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Sphaeropsis Blight (Diplodia Tip Blight) • Control – Removal of infected branches – Balanced fertilizers in spring – Adequate watering Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Phytopthora • Symptoms – Variable, may be slow decline or rapid death during dry weather – Root and crown root – Symptoms may include chlorosis, sparse foliage, reduced sized foliage in trees and shrubs • Causes – Fungi from the genus Phytopthora soilborne Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Phytopthora • Favorable conditions – High occurrence in areas with high soil moisture and low fertility • Control – Plant in well drained soil – Allow plants to dry out between irrigation – Systemic fungicides Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Verticillium • Symptoms – Especially common on maples but can occur on several landscape trees and shrubs – Usually the leaves on the entire plant or all the leaves on one side of the plant suddenly wilt – Dieback – May progress through several years • Causes – Fungi from genus Verticillium – Soilborne and spread by contamination Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Verticillium • Control – Plant disease-free nursery stock – Avoid wounding and contaminated tools – Avoid excess nitrogen – Replace infected plant with resistant varieties or immune species Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Powdery Mildew • Symptoms – White, powdery spots that grow to cover the entire surface – Young plants most vulnerable, especially in shade – Dwarfing, distortion, yellowing. – Leaves may drop • Causes – Over 1000 species of fungi primarily Microsphaera and Odium Important Plant Diseases-Ornamentals Powdery Mildew • Favorable conditions – Shade – Areas with poor air circulation – Easily spread by splashing water • Control – Prune affect parts – Select plants for resistance – Because powdery mildew are usually external they can be controlled ---curative fungicides