OAK WILT

This serious vascular wilt of oaks is caused by the fungus Ceratocystis fagacearum. At least fifty species and varieties of oak are susceptible. The disease has been most damaging in the Lake States but is also found in the eastern United States.

Oak wilt symptoms on red oak trees and leaves.

Oak wilt symptoms are most noticeable during late spring or early summer. Red oaks may be killed in as little as three weeks, the lower branches being affected last. In white oaks, symptoms are usually confined to a few branches each year and trees may live several years before death. Leaf symptoms are similar for both red and white oaks. Leaves turn yellow or brown and become dry progressively from the edge or tip to the midrib and base. Mature leaves may fall at any symptom stage from green to brown. Premature leaf shedding is the most outstanding symptom. A definite characteristic of the disease is the raising and cracking of the bark due to pressure of mats of the fungus growing between the bark and wood.

Oak wilt is spread over long distances by insects that pick up spores while crawling on the mats of infected trees. The disease may also spread from tree to tree via root graft. Short-distance spread is controlled by severing all roots of living trees around infected trees by use of a ditchdigger. Another control is to fell all trees in a 50-foot radius of infected trees; felling and burning of all parts of infected trees is sometimes done to prevent overland spread.