THE FINER POINTS OF TRELLIS RUST

THE FINER POINTS OF TRELLIS RUST

One thing about many of us plant health care providers is that we like a challenge. Not only do we find new plant varieties and species introduced into landscapes each year, but also new pests and diseases. A newer tree disease in our area, pear trellis rust, is one of those new (and challenging) diseases that we are going to be forced to face.

European pear rust, or trellis rust, behaves a bit differently than our native cedar-apple and cedar-hawthorn rusts that you may be familiar with. All of these rust diseases require two types of hosts: the flowering tree and juniper. Spores produced on trellis rust-infected pear leaves can only infect juniper and vice-versa. Our native rusts form twig lesions only on juniper. However, trellis rust causes twig cankers which lead to twig dieback on pear trees. This, in combination with the ability to severely deform leaves makes trellis rust so damaging that pear trees become an eyesore in the landscape.

Twig lesions cannot be treated once formed, and are difficult to prevent. Also, trellis rust is highly sensitive to temperature as a cue when to release spores. A short infection period would seem to make the disease less of a problem. Instead, it means that there is a smaller window of time to apply fungicide sprays to protect young, susceptible leaves. What gardener hasn’t been advised to pick up and destroyed the spotted, blackened leaves that fall in summer from diseased crabapples and garden plants? This is a way to reduce the number of infectious spores near your valued plants. But this practice, as suggested on the web to help control trellis rust, is useless. Fallen leaves are well past their spore-releasing ability and cannot infect either pear or juniper.

Trellis rust spores travel for miles on the wind. In our landscapes, where we like to plant what we know and what is growing so nicely in our neighbor’s yard, there is an excellent chance that trellis rust spores will land on a susceptible host. Check out the plantings in your neighborhood. How often do you see ornamental (or Bradford as many people know them by) pear trees? What percentage of pears have some type of juniper planted as ground cover directly under them, or in close proximity? Trellis rust is here to stay and on the move throughout southeast Michigan.

What are we to do to protect the huge population of the beautiful white-flowering pear? While we will try standard and new disease treatments to protect valuable pear trees, no one knows what outcome to expect. Recommendations from MSU are to separate pears from the alternate host by removing juniper plants within 50-100 yards of a flowering pear tree, yearly fungicide treatments for both pear and juniper, and most importantly, planting species resistant to trellis rust.

Our approach at Owen Tree Service at this time is:

* Help clients to understand the treatments and their costs, and that treatment will be necessary on an annual basis.
* Examine the site for the alternate host, and determine how important the junipers are to the landscape and the possibility of removing them for a meaningful distance from pear trees.
* Assess pear trees as candidates for routine treatment. Are they otherwise healthy and vigorous? Have they completely overgrown their planting site? Are they surrounded by juniper that will not be removed? Has the tree grown with poor form and is likely to break apart in the near future?
* Apply early spring fungicide treatments to protect pear foliage and twigs from infection. Where warranted, apply fungicides in fall to reduce spores formed on juniper.

Trellis rust is a challenge indeed. It is our hope, and our business at Owen Tree Service, to help you prepare, protect and recover from tree diseases and pests. Call us with your questions and concerns.

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