Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Secondary apple scab and rust infection periods April 28 through May 4; fire blight pressure low to moderate in the Winchester area


At Winchester, most apple trees are at petal fall and only later varieties such as Rome Beauty and some young trees are still in bloom

At the AREC in the past week we received three apple scab/rust infection periods.  Apr 28: 9 hr wet at 49° with 0.06 in. rain; Apr 29-30: 19 hr wet at 58° with 1.22 in. rain (heavy scab and rusts) and May 3-4: 7 hr wet at 62° with 0.42 in. rain. Cedar-apple rust galls and quince rust cankers remain active after these wetting events, and unprotected apple blossoms and small fruit remain susceptible to quince rust infection, so a follow-up application including an SI fungicide is suggested. On May 4 cedar rust lesions were evident on flower cluster and shoot leaves, from infection that occurred Apr 7-8.

This past week the length of wetting and amounts of rainfall have been somewhat variable across the major commercial fruit production areas of Virginia, but all areas received at least one extended wetting period favorable to secondary scab infection where control was not achieved during earlier primary infection periods. 

Apple powdery mildew infection occurs on days without rainfall above 53°, and we have had 12 days favorable for infection since spores were available on Mar 29. Expect secondary powdery mildew symptoms to begin appearing in the next week or so.

In the Winchester area, fire blight pressure has been mostly low to moderate on apples that first bloomed Mar 30, and that trend continues for late blooming apples through the coming week, However, fire blight blossom symptoms were reported on early blooming Asian pears Apr 27 in Clarke County. Also blossom infection (shown below) was also evident in young apple trees in central Virginia, apparently from infection that occurred Mar 29.


Blossom blight symptoms in central VA, May 2, 2020. Infection probably occurred Mar 29.