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Crown gall occurs on over 600 species of plants. The disease is
characterized by galls or overgrowths that form on the roots, trunk,
and arms of grape vines. V. vinifera cultivars
are more susceptible to crown gall than V.
labrusca cultivars. These galls are mostly found on the lower
truck near the soil line. Large galls can develop rapidly and completely
girdle a young vine in one season. When galls are numerous or when
they are located on major roots or on the root crown, they disrupt
the translocation of water and nutrients, leading to poor growth,
gradual dieback, and sometimes death of the vine. In general, affected
plants are more susceptible to adverse environmental conditions,
especially winter injury.
Symptoms
The major symptom of crown gall is the fleshy galls. Large galls
may develop rapidly and completely girdle young vines in one season.
Galled vines frequently produce inferior shoot growth, and portions
of the vine above the galls may die. Current-season galls are first
apparent in early summer as white, fleshy, callus growth. Galls
turn brown by late summer and in the fall become dry and corky.
The crown gall bacterium is systemically present in the vast majority
of grape vines, but seldom causes disease unless the vine in injured.
Disease Cycle
The disease organism is the soil-borne bacterium Agrobacterium
tumefaciens. The bacterium survives for long periods of time
in soil, within galls and within infested vines. A fresh wound is
required for gall formation to start in the grapevine. Contaminated
planting material (nursery stock) is another source of the disease.
Disease Management
Because the bacterium lives in the soil it cannot be controlled
by chemical sprays. It is necessary to examine new plants before
planting and discard any that have galls. In the vineyard, remove
large galls on the upper parts of the trunk or on the arms by pruning
the arm or trunk below the affected tissue and renew the vine by
means of a shoot from the base of the vine.
Budding and grafting are injuries that occasionally elicit disease
development at those wounding sites, but cold injury is by far the
most important factor in the Northeast. Therefore, management practices
that minimize the risk of cold injury are currently the only practical
technique for managing the disease. These include careful site selection
for cold-sensitive cultivars and cultural practices that promote
winter hardiness. Hilling above the union of grated vines protects
buds from freezing and ensures the development of new scion shoots
that may be needed for trunk renewal. The use of multiple trunk
vines and yearly replacement of dead trunks with renewals helps
to manage the disease at a tolerable level. In some areas growers
bury young vines in the fall to reduce freeze injury.
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