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			 Column Leaf problems
 By John Fulton
 
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            [June 04, 2014]  
			We may be running about three weeks 
			behind normal, but some things are catching up with a vengeance. 
			Anthracnose leaf fungus is one of them. If you haven’t noticed, 
			maple tree leaves on the better quality maples, such as red maples 
			and sugar maples, are browning or drying up in many locations.  | 
        
            | Anthracnose
 
 209_small.JPG) Anthracnose 
			starts as dead leaf areas between leaf veins, or on the tips of 
			leaves. When severe enough, leaves will fall. Several of the 
			infected trees have actually had the leaves turn completely black 
			already. It is much more noticeable on one side of many trees as 
			well, due to air movement carrying the disease and drying out 
			foliage quickly. The good news is that it rarely harms trees. If 
			enough leaves drop, a new set comes out in 4-6 weeks and we start 
			all over. The next set of leaves may also get the disease, but they 
			may not. Infection can continue with weather favorable to the 
			disease, and when nighttime temperatures stay under 65 degrees. 
			Treatments when you see the symptoms of this disease are simply 
			wasted time and money. The old “water and fertilizer routine” is 
			about the best you can do. 
 
			 
			Maple leaf bladder gall
 
 
 _small.JPG) “Soft 
			maples,” or silver maples are showing symptoms of maple leaf bladder 
			gall. Same song, different dance. The gall is yellow to red when it 
			starts out, then turns brown as the year wears on. The cause is a 
			mite feeding on the leaf. The leaf then swells in response to the 
			injury and toxins put into the leaf. The “bumps” are actually leaf 
			tissue. I usually compare it to you getting a mosquito bite. There 
			is no treatment, since the swellings are actually leaf tissue, and 
			there is no damage other than the unsightliness. 
 Apple scab
 
				
				 Apple scab is a disease similar to anthracnose, 
				and can cause premature leaf drop in apples and crabapples. If 
				you are on a regular spray schedule for fruit trees, it should 
				prevent most of the problems. You could also spray crabapples 
				this way, but you would have to weigh the cost and benefit since 
				no fruit production is involved. 
              
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               As a reminder, spray programs for 
			disease prevention in fruit trees should be applied every 10-14 days 
			after the bloom period is over. It should be stressed that these are 
			preventative programs, and not curative. These programs then 
			continue until roughly two weeks before the fruit is ready to 
			harvest. 
 
 Fire blight on Pear and Apple
 
			 Another leaf problem, but a different host set…. 
			There is a large amount of tip dieback in some varieties of pears 
			and apples, and this is probably fire blight. Look for a shepherd’s 
			crook at the tip of the affected areas as a clue it is fire blight. 
			Fire blight is a bacterial disease, therefore there is little chance 
			for you to treat it. The Bradford ornamental pear is also being 
			infected, as the new growth is withering. They are rated as 
			“moderately resistant,” but diseases have a way of changing over 
			time. This allows them to get around the bred-in resistance.
 The common treatment in commercial operations is streptomycin, but 
			it has to be applied before symptoms appear. Bordeaux mixture can 
			also help prevent the disease (applied before the infection next 
			year). Many infections happen at the time of flowering. Also, prune 
			out disease cankers when dormant.
 
			[By JOHN FULTON, COUNTY EXTENSION 
			DIRECTOR SERVING LOGAN, MENARD, AND SANGAMON COUNTIES] 
			
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