FUSIFORM RUST

Galls on 1-0 pine nursery stock.

Damage caused by fusiform rust infection.

Fusiform rust, caused by Cronartium fusiforme, is one of the most important diseases on southern pines. This rust is found from Maryland to Florida and west to Texas and southern Arkansas. The rust’s most important impact is in nurseries, seed orchards, and young plantations. Loblolly and slash pines are very susceptible to this rust. Pitch and pond pines are moderately susceptible, longleaf pine is fairly resistant, and shortleaf pine is highly resistant.

The most easily recognized symptom is the spindle-shaped canker on the pine branches or main stem. In early spring these swellings appear yellow to orange as the fungus produces powdery spores. As host tissue is killed, older stem cankers may become flat or sunken. Cankers often girdle trees and wind breakage at the canker is common. Fungus spores from the pine infect oak leaves. Brown hair-like structures, produced on the underside of the leaves in late spring, are the most conspicuous signs. These projections produce spores which in turn reinfect the pine trees, completing a “typical” rust cycle.

Fruiting fusiform-shaped canker on main stem of southern pine.

Silvicultural practices may lessen the incidence of infection in plantations. Avoid planting highly susceptible species such as slash and loblolly pines in areas of known high rust incidence. In these areas more resistant species such as longleaf or shortleaf pine should be planted. Pruning infected branches will prevent stem infection in young plantations. Rust-resistant pines should be readily available from the nurseries in the near future. Culling out seedlings with obvious galls before outplanting will reduce the disease incidence in new plantations.