Cedar-Apple and
Related Rusts on Ornamentals
Cedar-apple rust and closely related diseases--cedar-quince
and cedar-hawthorn rusts--are caused by fungi belonging to the genus
Gymnosporangium. These fungi
require two different living host plants in order to complete their
life cycles. If either host plant is not present, the fungus dies.
Juniper, sometimes called cedar, is one host while alternate hosts
include apple, hawthorn, quince, and shadbush or serviceberry, depending
upon the species of fungus involved.
Symptoms (specific symptoms depend on which
species of rust is causing disease)
- Juniper (Juniperus):
- -smooth, round, up to golf-ball size, galls on
twigs (cedar-apple
rust)
- -elongated,slightly swollen areas along the branches
(cedar-hawthorn rust)
- -prolific branching, called witches' brooming
- Apple (Malus):
- -yellow to bright-orange
spots on leaves
- -spots
on fruit
- Hawthorn (Crataegus):
- -yellow spots on leaves
- -distorted fruit with horn-like protrusions
- -galled twigs
- Shadbush or serviceberry (Amelanchier):
- -brownish-orange spots on leaves
- -distorted fruits with horn-like protrusions
Life History
Rust overwinters as mycelium in gall tissue on junipers. During
warm, rainy spring weather, gelatinous horn-like
protrusions emerge from
the gall. Teliospores produced on the horns germinate and give
rise to another spore type, basidiospores, which are carried by
wind to fruit or leaves of the broadleaf host. Infections occur
if moisture is available on the leaves and temperatures are adequate.
Later, pycniospores formed on the upper leaf surface of the broadleaf
host allow the fungus to mate. Aeciospores that form in the same
spots as the pycniospores but on the underside of the leaf of the
broadleaf host are carried by the wind back to junipers in the summer.
The spring after the juniper is infected, gall tissue begins to
form. The second spring after juniper infection, spores are released
from the mature gall. Thus, 18 to 20 months are required for the
gall to form on junipers, mature, and release spores.
Management
In most cases in the landscape, damage to either host is not severe
enough to warrant fungicide applications. However, susceptible varieties
of the broadleaf host can be heavily infected and defoliated. Fruits
of the broadleaf host can be severely deformed as well. In the nursery,
Daconil * can be applied to crabapples in the spring and early summer.
To protect hawthorns in the nursery, apply Bayleton*, Strike*, Daconil*,
Dithane*, Mancozeb*, Duosan*, or Zyban* beginning as the flowers
open and at 10-day intervals. Resistant cultivars of crabapple and
apple are available.
Significant damage to junipers may occur if the broadleaf
host is close by. Unsightly galls forming on the twigs and branches
reduce the value of the plant and twig dieback can occur if the
disease is very severe. In many cases, the disease is not noticeable
on junipers except in the spring when the galls are producing the
bright yellow-orange spore horns. Junipers should be carefully inspected
during each dormant season and any gall tissue should be pruned
and destroyed before the spore horns develop. In the nursery, apply
Bayleton 25*, Duosan*, or Zyban* in the summer.
Avoid planting the alternate hosts close together.
If possible, remove susceptible non-crop plants from the vicinity.
For example, if junipers are the desired plants, remove wild apples
and hawthorns from the nursery or landscape. If a broadleaf host
is the desired plant, remove wild junipers.
Cedar-apple rust hosts:
(Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginiana)
Apple, crabapple
Eastern red cedar, Chinese, and prostrate junipers
Cedar-hawthorn rust hosts:
(Gymnosporangium globosum)
Apple, crabapple, hawthorn, quince, pear, and shadbush
Eastern red cedar, Rocky Mountain juniper, and prostrate junipers
Cedar-quince rust hosts:
(Gymnosporangium clavipes)
Apple, crabapple, mountain ash, cotoneaster, hawthorn, quince, pear,
photinia, shadbush
Eastern red cedar, Rocky Mountain juniper, savin, and prostrate
junipers
*Trade name
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