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Common Diseases of Landscape Plants found in Tennessee

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Presentation on theme: "Common Diseases of Landscape Plants found in Tennessee"— Presentation transcript:

1 Common Diseases of Landscape Plants found in Tennessee
Alan Windham Entomology and Plant Pathology

2 1. Powdery Mildews Easily identified by white mycelium
May distort infected leaves Common hosts include: euonymus, crape myrtle, dogwood, rose, phlox, zinnia

3 2. Downy mildews Symptoms- angular leaf spots to severely burned foliage Mycelium on the undersides of the leaves Hosts – rose, snap dragon, pansy

4 3. Gray mold (Botrytis blight)
Look for grayish-brown mold on leaves, stems, flowers Favored by cool, moist weather Numerous woody and herbaceous hosts

5 4. Rusts Yellow leaf spots and rust colored pustules
Numerous hosts including conifers, broadleaf plants May cause galls, twig dieback Cedar-Apple Rust/on cedar

6 Cedar Hawthorne Rust Rust infects leaves, stems and hawthorne fruit
Rust spores emerge from cankered cedar branch

7 Daylily Rust

8 5. Virus diseases Variety of symptoms including: mosaic, ringspots, rosette, oakleaf pattern, stunting and flower break Impatiens necrotic spot has over 350 hosts

9 Rose rosette/landscape roses
Found on multiflora rose Increasing common on landscape roses Transmitted by eriophyid mites Kills infected plants within two years

10 Aster yellows –Purple coneflower

11 6. Fungal Leaf spot diseases
The most common plant diseases Favored by wet weather, high humidity, overhead irrigation Many cause premature defoliation

12 Apple Scab Common on older crabapple cultivars not resistant to scab
Causes premature leaf drop which leads to sucker growth Many new cultivars are resistant to scab

13 Entomosporium leaf spot/Photinia
Generally there are two types of photinia: those that have this disease and those that are going to have this disease Avoid this plant until resistant cultivars are available

14 Tar spot Although not aesthetically pleasing generally harmless to maple The black “tar spots” are the fungus Rhytisma Speckled tar spot is a similar disease caused by a different pathogen

15 Cercospora leaf spot of bottle brush buckeye

16 7. Shot hole diseases Fungal or bacterial shot hole diseases
Affecting plants in Prunus genus only May be mistaken for insect feeding

17 Bacterial shot hole/cherry laurel
Worse in container nurseries or landscapes with overhead irrigation Usually present at low levels in most landscapes Chemical control is usually not needed in landscape beds

18 Needle Cast Diseases Essentially a leaf spot disease of conifers
Attack older needles in interior of trees Disease of pine, spruce, fir May make affected tree’s canopy look thin Needlecast/Eastern white pine

19 Kabatina Tip Blight Common tip blight of juniper
Weak pathogen that invades wounds from insects/ice Attacks last years growth Symptoms visible in late winter/spring

20 8. Anthracnose Diseases Fungal leaf spot, twig blight and/or canker disease Favored by cool, wet weather Hosts: ash, dogwood, maple, oak, sycamore

21 Dogwood Anthracnose

22 9. Canker Diseases Leaf, needle and twig dieback are early symptoms
Sunken, swollen or resinous cankers Usually fungal but may be bacterial Girdle and kill large branches

23 Botryosphaeria canker/Cherry
Young trees stressed by drought are most susceptible to this disease Prune out diseased branches Trunk cankers often lead to death of the entire tree

24 Seiridium canker/Leyland cypress
Fairly easy to find on Leyland cypress in non-irrigated landscapes Prune out diseased shoots Severely infected plants will have to be replaced

25 Seiridium Canker - Arizona cypress
Similar symptoms on Leyland cypress Resinous canker Disfigures and may kill tree

26 Hypoxylon canker Thyronectria canker

27 Nectria Canker A perennial canker of dogwood, linden, walnut
Callus tissue forms at margin of canker each year Canker appears like a target with concentric rings Nectria canker of dogwood

28 Black knot/Purple leaf plum
Very common on flowering plum Knots should be pruned out Re-infection may come from nearby infected trees

29 Fire Blight ‘Shepherd’s crook’ symptom Bacterial disease
Control with dormant pruning, resistant cultivars, moderate nitrogen fertilization, antibiotic sprays

30 10. Leaf Galls Fungal diseases of azalea, peach, oak
Most leaf galls are caused by mites or insects Swollen or blistered leaves

31 Camellia leaf gall

32 11. Crown gall Tumors/galls on stems/roots
Soft, spongy to wooden and corky with maturity Bacteria enter through wounds Inject genetic material into hosts cells

33 12. Stem/Crown Rots Fungal diseases that attack stem or crown of plants at soil-line Damping off of seedlings Southern blight Sclerotinia stem rot Rhizoctonia stem rot

34 Rhizoctonia stem rot Oak leaf hydrangea

35 Southern blight Crabapple Dec. Magnolia Sclerotia at base of tree

36 13. Nematode Diseases Root knot the most common disease
Foliar nematode on herbaceous plants All plant parasitic nematodes have a stylet

37 Root Knot Nematodes Adult Root Knot Female Root knot juvenile
(Infective stage)

38 Lesion Nematode/Crabapple liners

39 14. Wilt Diseases Restrict water flow to leaves
Soil-borne or insect vectored Dutch elm disease, Verticillium wilt Bacterial leaf scorch

40 Dutch elm disease Transmitted by bark beetles
Sanitation is important for control Injection can be used to protect valuable trees Resistant cultivars are available

41 15. Root rot diseases Affected plants may be stunted, wilted
Discolored, decayed roots Poor drainage, standing water, excessive irrigation, favor disease development

42 Phytophthora root rot/Boxwood

43 Black root rot/Japanese holly

44 Black root rot - pansy


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