RED ROOT AND BUTT ROT
Fruiting body of red root and butt rot of pine.
Polyporus tomentosus causes red root and butt rot of living conifers throughout North America. Common hosts of the fungus are: spruce, larch, pine, fir, Douglas fir, hemlock, and cedar. Throughout the southern United States, P. tomentosus has been reported in two general areas; causing extensive degrade of mature shortleaf pine in northern Arkansas and root and butt rot of slash pine in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
The fungus is believed to enter living hosts through basal wounds and damaged roots. Under ideal conditions, the fungus may spread from infected to healthy trees by way of root contacts or grafts. Growth of the fungus is very slow, often causing host mortality 20 to 30 years after initial infection. Wood decayed initially appears firm, but dark reddish-brown in color. In advanced stages, the wood is flecked with elliptical white pockets separated by brown-colored wood. Infected conifers generally express typical root rot symptoms. Trees show evidence of reduced radial and internodal growth, accompanied by death of the crown from the base upward. The foliage appears off-color and reduced in length. Under moist conditions, sporophores are produced either at the base of infected trees or on the forest floor. Bracket-shaped sporophores are produced at the base of infected trees while stipitate conks are produced on the ground directly over infected or dead roots. Fresh sporophores appear yellow-brown in color from above with a lighter colored pore surface below.
No effective method of controlling the disease in forest stands is presently known. However, damage and losses may be reduced by management practices which reduce or eliminate the chance introduction of the disease into healthy stands. In areas where red root and butt rot is common, attempts should be made to conduct logging and thinning operations during the dry season to avoid mechanical damage to the root systems of the residual trees.