Pacific Northwest 1998 An Online Guide to Plant Disease Control

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Apple -- Apple Proliferation
 
Cause: Apple proliferation is caused by Candidatus Phytoplasma mali that can be transmitted by artificial grafting, root grafts or by psyllids and a leafhopper. The disease, which occurs throughout Europe but not in the United States, is a high risk to U.S. production if it ever is introduced here. One possible entry route is illegally smuggled budwood or trees. Infected trees may recover from this disease such that there are no symptoms but trees still carry the phytoplasma.
Symptoms: The most reliable characteristics include witches' brooms, small fruit, and late growth of terminal buds in the fall. Elongate stipules and leaf rosettes develop on the terminal parts of shoots. Root systems are compact and result in stunted growth of infected trees. All symptoms may not occur on all parts of the tree at the same time.

Flowering may be delayed; flower parts are deformed and may resemble leaves. Leaves emerge earlier and are irregularly serrated and small. Summer leaves often are chlorotic, and trees may exhibit early fall color (lilac or purplish red). Fruits are few, small, incompletely colored, and poorly flavored.

Cultural control: Send trees with these symptoms to a diagnostic lab to confirm the disease. Never smuggle in budwood or trees.
References:
National Research Support Project 5. WSU. Disease Descriptions. Apple Proliferation. http://nrsp5.prosser.wsu.edu/ddp00039.html
Content edited by: Jay W. Pscheidt on January 1, 2009
 
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