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Fire Blight
on Woody Ornamentals
Fire blight is a disease caused by the bacterium Erwinia
amylovora. This bacterium can attack more than 75 species
of trees and shrubs including apple, pear, quince, mountain ash,
crabapple, hawthorn, cotoneaster, serviceberry, and pyracantha.
The bacterium overwinters on infected plants in darkened, slightly
sunken cankers. In the spring, the bacteria are dispersed by insects,
rain, wind, and animals.
Symptoms
- Twigs, branches, and leaders on trees and shrubs wilt
and blacken, especially during flowering.
- Affected twigs and branches may bend over
into the shape of shepherd's crook.
- Blackened flower parts remain attached to the tree.
- Cream-colored liquid may ooze out of the
cankers and run down the trunk and branches in the spring if conditions
are very wet.
Life History
The bacterium is carried from infected tissue or from
liquid oozing from the infected tissue to natural openings or wounds
in susceptible plants by flower-visiting insects, rain, wind, birds,
and various crawling insects. The nectaries and other flower parts,
hydathodes and stomates on leaves, and small wounds on succulent
twigs and branches all can be sites of initial infection. Succulent
plant parts are blackend and killed. The bacteria then move farther
into and girdle branches and the trunk. A slightly
sunken, darkened canker forms in the invaded wood. Close examination
will reveal a dark line at the edge of the canker. While plants
are most susceptible during flowering and new shoot development,
fire blight can continue to spread later in the season.
Favorable Conditions
- Fertilization practices that produce very succulent
growth render plants more susceptible to fire blight.
- Moderately high temperatures (70-81°F = 21-27°C),
high relative humidity, and rainfall during flowering provide
optimum conditions for fire blight development.
- Injury due to hail or windblown soil opens tissue
to infection.
Management
- Grow resistant varieties whenever possible.
- Crabapple cultivars with resistance: Adams,
Callaway, David, Dolgo, Harvest Gold, Indian Summer, Jewelberry,
Liset, Profusion, Red Baron, Selkirk, and Sentinel.
- Pyracantha cultivars
considered resistant include Mojave, Navaho, Teton, and Shawnee.
- Cotoneaster anoenus,
C. adpressus, C.
canadensis, C. dammeri
var. radicans, C.
horizontalis, C. microphyllus,
C. praecox, and C.
zabelii are resistant.
- Crataegus arnoldiana,
C. coccinea, C.
crus-galli, C. douglasii,
C. phaenopyrum, C.
prunifolia, C. puntata
"Ohio Pioneer," C. viridis
"Winer King" are considered resistant.
- Mountain ash: Sorbus
aucuparia and S. intermedia are resistant.
- Do not purchase or plant infected material. Plant
only fire blight-free trees and shrubs.
- Remove severely infected plants.
- Once the disease has begun, a three-pronged
management scheme must be implemented:
- During the dormant season, closely examine
susceptible plants and prune out infected tissues. Look for
blackened twigs, branches, and flower parts. Find the sunken,
darkened cankers on the wood. Prune when the weather is dry,
cutting at least 4 inches below the canker. Disinfest pruning
tools between cuts by placing them in 1 part household bleach:9
parts water or in Agribrom* for 10 minutes. Or, disinfest
the tools by dipping them in 70% alcohol or ZeroTol* and letting
them air dry.
- During the growing season, prune infected
tissues by cutting at least 12 inches below the canker. Disinfest
the pruning tools between cuts as noted above.
- To plants for which the Bordeaux mixture is
registered, apply Bordeaux mixture (2-6-100 containing 1 gallon
of miscible superior oil per 100 gallons of spray) before
bud break. Or, apply a combination of mancozeb and copper.
*Trade name
| COMMON NAME |
TRADE NAME |
| copper |
Phyton 27, Basicop, Nu-Cop, TennCop 5E, Camelot,
Kocide, Copper-Count N, |
| mancozeb |
Pentathlon |
| mancozeb + copper |
Junction, ManKocide |
References
Nichols, L. P. 1985. Disease Resistant Crabapples,
Results of 1985 Survey. Department of Plant Pathology, The Pennsylvania
State University.
Van der Zwet, T., S. V. and Beer. 1991. "Fire blight: Its nature,
prevention, and control." USD. Information Bulletin
No. 631. 83 pp.
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