Monday, June 10, 2013

Extended wetting at mild temperatures- a preview of summer diseases?

We had an extended wetting period at our AREC June 6-8: 40 hours wetting with 1.1 inches of rain at 63°. Today's rain has added another 0.4 in. of rain and it may not be finished yet. Those rains combined to remove much of any fungicide residue applied earlier last week, leaving the trees possibly vulnerable to secondary apple scab and Brooks spot infection; also think of these wetting events as initiating early activity by the Alternaria and Glomerella leaf spot fungi. The rains may cause cracking of ripening sweet cherries and will increase the potential for fruit rots:  http://treefruitdisease.blogspot.com/2010/06/cherry-rots.html

For purposes of predicting development of the sooty blotch and flyspeck (SBFS) fungal complex, we record accumulated wetting hours, starting 10 days after petal fall. As of this morning, June 10, we had accumulated 145 wetting hours toward the 250 wetting hour threshold for specific treatment against the SBFS fungal complex. Because of an earlier petal fall date and more wetting, some areas east of the Blue Ridge may now be approaching the 250-hr threshold for inclusion of a specific SBFS fungicide in the mix.
 
As of today, June 10, we have had 40 dry weather apple powdery mildew days since spores were first released Apr 11, ranking this year among the higher mildew pressure years. The recent rains will promote continued tree growth and susceptibility to mildew infection. Maintain mildew suppression on susceptible cultivars until shoot growth ceases to prevent the bud infection which leads to overwintering and a recurrent problem next year.

I have received several reports of fire blight showing up, likely from infection that occurred at late bloom: 
http://treefruitdisease.blogspot.com/2013/05/fire-blight-threat-to-late-bloom.html