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WHITE PINE BLISTER RUST


WHITE PINE BLISTER RUST
Photo Information
Copyright: Jerolim Vidic (cro-star) Silver Note Writer [C: 4 W: 3 N: 62] (300)
Genre: Plants
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2005-05-13
Categories: Trees
Camera: Panasonic DMC FZ - 20 LUMIX, 36 - 432 mm
Exposure: f/4, 1/60 seconds
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2005-07-25 20:59
Viewed: 1434
Points: 3
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
WHITE PINE BLISTER RUST

Tree: This disease does not affect species outside of the white (5-needle) pine group (similar symptoms on lodgepole or ponderosa pine may be caused by western gall rust). The foliage may have red or yellow needle spots. On the branches, spindle-shaped swellings or cankers with small cup-like indentations are frequent. Often infections kill the branch, resulting in bright red "flags" in the crown. On the trunk, a diamond-shaped canker with dead roughened bark and greenish-yellow to orange margins develops.

Fungus: A honey-colored ooze (pycnia) or pustules of powdery orange spores (aecia) develop on the swellings or cankers in the spring. As the disease develops, cankers will have dead centers, surrounded by pustules of aecia, surrounded by drops of pycnia, and with a yellowish zone outermost. The canker grows in size every year. May be confused with: Resin flow at the base from Armillaria root rot.

Disease cycle: This disease is the most serious pest of 5-needle pines in the Pacific Northwest. The rust has a five-spore cycle that requires an alternate host, members of the Ribes family. These include species of gooseberry and currant. On the pine in spring, pycnial spores give rise to aecial spores, which may fly 400 to 800 miles to infect the leaves of Ribes plants. On the plant, two spore stages follow, then give rise to another airborne spore stage which infects the pine again. These spores infect needles, then grow down to the twig and from there to the branch.Branch infections within 4" of the trunk will spread to the trunk in time. Once the trunk is infected and a canker has developed death of the tree is inevitable, though there is some genetic variability in rate of canker growth and some trees have survived many years before being girdled and killed. Once a tree gets beyond 20-30 years of age, the disease most frequently causes only branch flagging.

Predisposing agents: Cool, moist weather late in the summer or early fall is required for infection of the pine host, with 48 hours of temperatures not above 68F.

Impact: White pine blister rust was introduced in the east from Europe between 1898 and 1908, although the disease is believed to have originated in Asia. In 1910 it was introduced into British Columbia and has since spread through the West. In North America as a whole, it has caused more damage and more money has been spent to control it than any other conifer disease. Thousands of white pine stands have been seriously damaged and many have been entirely lost. In the Pacific Northwest, losses are estimated at 5 million cubic feet annually

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Thanks Jerolim. Great notes. You have done well on the depth of field with such a complex subject. The image has broken up a little with either sharpening or saturation but still presents the topic well.

  • Great 
  • Janice Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Star Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 3316 W: 149 N: 6113] (18648)
  • [2005-07-26 6:22]

Hi Jerolim, this plant is interesting, and thanks for the notes too. This tree looks healthy - has it got the WHITE PINE BLISTER RUST? Nice composition and colours. Well done.

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