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Bitter rot, Glomerella cingulata,
is an important disease in the southern states and is becoming more
important in Pennsylvania. Its hosts are apple and pear trees. On
peach and nectarine the same fungus causes a disease known as anthracnose;
on grape it causes ripe rot; and on chestnut it causes blossom-end
rot of green burrs. The discussion below is limited to the disease
as it affects apple and pear trees.
Symptoms
Bitter rot occurs only on fruit. Cankers can form
on twigs, but they are rare. The fungus is one of the few fruit
rot organisms that can penetrate the unbroken skin of the fruit.
The disease is noticed first, during midsummer or later, as a small,
light-brown, circular spot. One or many spots may appear; if temperatures
are high (above 80 degrees F) they enlarge quite rapidly and soon
change to a dark brown. By the time the spots are 1/8 to 1/4 inch
in diameter, they are distinctly sunken or saucer shaped.
When they reach 1/2 inch in diameter, small black dots--the fruiting
bodies of the fungus--appear in the sunken lesion. These may be
arranged in concentric rings. Later, they ooze a gelatinous salmon-pink
mass of spores, which can be washed by rains to other fruit. Beneath
the surface of the spot, the flesh is light brown and watery in
a cone-shaped area, with the small end of the cone toward the fruit
center. As the fruit ripens, it decays rapidly and finally shrivels
into a mummy.
Disease Cycle
The fungus overwinters in mummied fruit and in cracks
and crevices in the bark. Jagged ends of broken limbs are ideal
sites for the fungus to survive. The fungus can also survive on
dead wood in the tree or on brush in the ground. With the advent
of warm weather the fungus produces spores that are washed by rains
to developing fruit. Often the first infections appear as a cone-shaped
area on the tree and can be traced to a source of spores at the
tip of the cone. The optimal conditions for the disease to develop
are rains, relative humidity of 80 to 100 percent, and a temperature
of 80-85 degrees F.
Disease Management
Routine fungicide sprays normally control bitter rot
in Pennsylvania. Summer fungicide applications should not be extended
beyond 14-day intervals, especially during wet seasons. Sanitation
practices such as removing mummified fruit and dead wood is important
in controlling this disease.
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