Nectria Canker
The fungus Nectria cinnabarina
invades wood damaged by freezing, hail, animals, and insects. Most
hardwoods with such injuries are susceptible to attack. Slightly
sunken areas (cankers) develop around wound or damaged tissue. Smooth
barked areas are generally darker brown than surrounding bark. If
the bark of the tree is rough and dark, the canker is very difficult
to see.
This fungus is an opportunistic pathogen readily attacking
damaged wood. It is active at all times of the year when temperatures
are above freezing and sufficient moisture is present. Trees weakened
by recent transplanting, root pruning by nearby excavation, and
especially by freezing are most susceptible to Nectria
attack. If limbs are pruned during wet autumn weather, Nectria
can readily invade the wound. Vigorous trees usually form a callus,
wall off the fungus within one year, and recover. If a tree is not
vigorous, invasion may continue and ultimately girdle and kill the
branch or, in the case of small trees, the trunk.
Both the asexually formed spores (conidia formed all
year) and the sexual spores (ascospores) formed in the late summer
are capable of causing disease.
Symptoms and Signs
- Random branches and twigs do not leaf out
in the spring.
- Branches of trees and the trunks of small
trees are girdled and killed.
- Areas around wounds are slightly sunken.
- Salmon, pink, or cream-colored fungal fruiting
structures, shaped like small cushions, form in the spring and
early summer where there are cracks or natural openings in the
bark over the canker. These asexually formed structures turn brown
and black with age, especially after freezing.
- In the summer and fall, red to orange-red
sexual fruiting structures form in the cankered area.
Management
- Avoid injuring the tree in the autumn. Avoid
pruning in the autumn, especially if the weather is wet.
- During dry weather, prune off infected branches.
- Protect trees that have been transplanted
within 2 years from drought and other stresses.
- Protect young trees from freeze damage where
possible.
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