Thursday, May 9, 2013

Disease update May 9; threat of fire blight through the weekend

This week we have had a lot of disease activity, a heavy scab and quince rust and cedar-apple rust infection period at 46-57°, with 2.2 inches of rain from 10 AM May 6 to 8 AM May 8, and another scab infection period of 16 hours at 47-52° with 0.06 inches of rain last night. Scab lesions were present where trees were not adequately protected during the Apr 17 infection period. Most protective fungicides would have been depleted by the nearly 2 inches of rainfall associated with extended wetting May 7, leaving susceptible fruit and foliage vulnerable to infection by scab and the rusts, and also to powdery mildew. Since apple powdery mildew spores were first released Apr 11 we have had 20 days favorable for infection.

Fire blight symptoms were observed May 8 on Red Delicious blossom clusters in central Virginia. The fire blight outlook for the Winchester area for the next several days remains similar to what had predicted for these days since late last week. The Maryblyt graphic below shows that infection is possible with wetting May 8-10. Many cultivars still have susceptible bloom in the Winchester area and the moisture from an airblast application meets the wetting requirement to cause infection if all other other infection criteria have been met. The weather conditions used in the predictive part of this graphic come from the Weather Channel for Winchester, supplemented by site-specific data from SkyBit Inc.