
Christmas trees
Field crops
Fruit
Home and yard
Nursery and landscape
Turfgrass
Vegetable

Diagnostic Services
Soil/Plant Nutrient Lab
Enviro-weather
Regional IPM Center
Pesticide safety
Organic: New Ag Network
Invasive species
Sustainable ag & food systems

MSU ANR departments
MSU Extension
Site index
Contacts/permissions |
| IPM scouting in stone fruits > bacterial canker |
Cankers on trunks, limbs and branches of sweet cherry, tart cherry, plum and prune exude gum during late spring and summer. Leaf, fruit and blossom infections are common following prolonged wet, cold periods during or soon after bloom. Leaf spots are dark brown, circular to angular and sometimes surrounded with yellow halos.
Spurs with infected leaves and fruit often die back. Infected leaf and flower buds may fail to open in spring, resulting in a condition referred to as “dead bud.” Terminals and branches may wilt and die in summer or early autumn if girdled by a canker. Occasionally, large scaffold limbs are killed. |
 |
 |
| Bacterial canker on tart cherry (left) and plum (right). |
|
 |
Lesions on green cherry fruit are brown with a margin of wet or water-soaked tissue. |
 |
Bacterial canker on sweet cherry. |
|
Additional information
- For more monitoring information and evaluation of available pesticides:
Michigan Fruit Management Guide
- MSU Diagnostic Services for assistance in pest identification.
- MSU Fruit Crop Advisory Team Alert newsletters for current pest/crop conditions.
|
Images on this page provided by Alan L. Jones.
This information was developed from A Pocket Guide for IPM Scouting in Stone Fruits by David Epstein, Larry J. Gut, Alan L. Jones and Kimberly Maxson-Stein. Purchase this in a pocket-sized guide for reference in the orchard from MSU Extension (publication E-2840). |
|