Title: Canker Diseases
1Canker Diseases
- ESC 432 Forest Pathology
- Reading Text Chapter 14, pages 341-347
2Cankers
- Fungi grow in cambium
- Kill by girdling
- Variable in disease severity
- Mostly Ascomycetes and Deuteromycetes
- Most common on hardwood hosts
3Stem Anatomy
Phloem
Xylem
4Mode of Action
- Canker fungi feed on nutrients and carbon in
vascular system - Toxins that kill host tissue
- Enzymes to decompose wood
- Host responds with callusing
5Disease Cycle
- Spores infect through wounds or branch stubs in
wet weather - The fungus invades the host
- Sporulation in killed bark, usually asexual
- Mycelium over-seasons as a saprobe in dead bark
or soil and re-infects when host defenses are low
Wound which became infected from splashing of
infested soil
6Types of Cankers
- Opportunists (saprobes contributing to declines)
- Annual cankers
- Target cankers caused by facultative parasites
- Diffuse cankers
7Opportunists
Fusicoccum
- Associated with weakened trees or branches
- More aggressive when trees are drought or shade
stressed - Often part of a disease complex
Hypoxylon
8Annual Cankers
- Fungus is only active for one season
- Canker is inactivated by host response
- Stressed or injured trees can get multiple
cankers - No impact on tree growth, but lumber is degraded
Fusarium solani on yellow poplar
9Perennial Target Cankers
- Balanced interaction of fungus and host
- Fungus destroys a small amount of cambium each
year - Host walls off fungus
- Fungus grows when host is dormant
Nectria target canker
10Diffuse Cankers
- Usually very aggressive pathogens
- Host unable to produce a callus wall
- Expands during the growing season
Cryphonectria parasitica, chestnut blight
11Some examples
- Madrone decline
- Pitch canker
- Sudden oak death
12Pacific Madrone Decline
- Host Pacific madrone (Arbutus menziesii)
- Pathogens
- Fusicoccum arbuti (Anamorph asexual)
- Botryosphaeria spp. (Teleomorph sexual
- not found yet)
13Fusicoccum arbuti formerly Nattrassia mangiferae
- Perennial canker on stems and branches
- Opportunistic, worse when host is under water
stress - Can be aggressive on some individuals
14Also gets on small branches, leaves
- Ubiquitous
- Opportunistic
- Normally kills shaded, suppressed branches
- On madrone (Northern range), kills branches
water-stressed by Nattrassia cankers
15Madrone Decline
- More declining trees noticed after periods of
drought - Older trees more susceptible
- Important factors
- Fire suppression
- Climate change
- Introduced pathogen?
Declining madrone trees at Seward Park, Seattle,
WA
16Pitch Canker
- Host Monterey pine (Pinus radiata)
- Pathogen Fusarium circinatum
- Significant damage on native Monterey pines in CA
- Insects important in disease cycle
17Distribution
18Disease cycle and insect vectors
- Twig beetles
- Engraver beetles
- Cone beetles
All are in the family Scolytidae
19Management
- Plant resistant species or genotypes
- Induced resistance and remission
- Chemical control for nursery trees
- Remove dead material
- Promote natural regeneration
20Sudden Oak Death
- Hosts gt40 species including
- Susceptible Tanoak, Coast live oak, Black oak
- Foliar Buckeye, California bay laurel, Pacific
madrone, Rhododendron, Evergreen huckleberry,
Bigleaf maple - Pathogen Phytophthora ramorum (Oomycetes)
- Occurs in central coast of CA, southern OR, Europe
21Phytophthora ramorum
- Closest relative P. lateralis
- Cool, moist climates
- Airborne
- Two mating types
- A1 European
- A2 North American
Hyphae in tanoak lenticel
Zoosporangia
Chlamydospore On bay leaf surface
22Distribution
- European A1
- Belgium
- Scandinavia
- France
- Germany
- Ireland
- UK
- Spain
- Canada (B. C.)
- Oregon (Clackamas Co.)
- North American A2
- Central coastal California
- Curry County, OR
- King County, WA
- Belgium
Forests Nurseries, horticultural plants
23Symptoms
- Bleeding cankers (oaks and tanoaks)
- Dieback and leaf spots (foliar hosts)
- Wilting (tanoak)
- Hypoxylon fruiting on dead or dying trees
24Rhododendron Symptoms
Leaf necrosis
Shoot blight and dieback
Staining under bark
25Douglas-fir and Redwood
On succulent shoots and foliage, not woody
material
26How it spreads
- P. ramorum isolated from plant debris, soil,
nursery plants, rain-splash - Human movement of infested materials
- Birds
- Soil/rain for local or tree-to-tree spread
- Foliar hosts
- Insect vectors being investigated
27Management
- Quarantine plant materials and soil
- Wash vehicles and shoes after visiting SOD areas
- Composting kills P. ramorum
- Phosphorous acid injections on valuable trees