IRPEX CANKER
Irpex canker, caused by Irpex mollis, is prevalent in bottomlands and on upland areas of the Southeast. In the bottoms, Nuttall, water, and willow oaks are affected. White, chestnut, southern red, and black oaks are the hosts of this disease on upland sites.
Fruiting body of Irpex rot.
Cross section of tree showing rot and decay.
Irpex canker is also considered to be a canker-rot disease. Symptoms on infected trees frequently involve irregular cankers up to two feet in length. Cankers are usually found on trees eight to ten inches in diameter or larger, at a height of twenty feet above the ground. Branch stubs, signifying probable infection points, are usually present in the centers of cankers. The portion of the trunk affected is usually swollen but sometimes may be sunken. At the base of the sunken portion of the canker are small, creamy-white, toothed fruiting bodies or conks with a leathery texture. Conks also appear on hardwood logs. The wood behind cankers is characterized by a tough, spongy, white rot which extends as much as eight feet above and below the canker. The decay pattern may also extend downward into the roots. In cross-section, the rotted areas appear as finger-like projections radiating out toward the sapwood. Gradually the rot column tapers to a thin central core beyond which white flecks appear, and this early rot stage is concentrated along the rays of the oaks.
Control for Irpex canker is the same as for other canker-rots—salvage of undesirable cankered trees.