| Cedar-apple rust (Gymnosporangium juniperivirginianae),
cedar-hawthorn rust (G. globosum),
and cedar-quince rust (G. clavipes) are closely
related rust diseases that require two hosts to
complete their life cycle. All three rusts can infect
most varieties of eastern red cedar (Juniperus
virginiana) as well as many other junipers and an
alternate host. Of these alternate hosts, cedar-apple
rust is primarily a disease of apples and crabapples.
Cedar-hawthorn rust, in addition to affecting apples
and crabapples, sometimes infects pears, quince,
and serviceberry. Cedar-quince rust has the broadest
host range and can infect many genera in the rose
family. In addition to those plants already
mentioned, mountain-ash, flowering quince,
cotoneaster, chokecherry, and photinia are also hosts
for this disease.
Symptoms and Diagnosis
Symptoms on juniper: Brown, perennial galls form
on twigs. When mature (usually in two years), the
galls swell and repeatedly produce orange,
gelatinous telial horns during rainy spring weather.
The galls of cedar-apple rust are often over 2 inches
in diameter, while cedar-hawthorn rust galls are
rarely over 2 inches in diameter. Occasionally the
twig beyond the gall dies, but usually no significant
damage occurs on the juniper host.
Symptoms on apple (or crabapple): Circular, yellow
spots (lesions) appear on the upper surfaces of the
leaves shortly after bloom. In late summer, brownish
clusters of threads or cylindrical tubes (aecia) appear
beneath the yellow leaf spots or on fruits and twigs.
The spores associated with the threads or tubes
infect the leaves (needles) and twigs of junipers
during wet, warm weather.
Life Cycle
On juniper, galls appear about seven months after
infection, and they form gelatinous masses of spores
after 18 months. Golf ball-like depressions form on
the gall that will give rise to telial horns the
following spring. The telial horns are brownish in
color, but rapidly elongate and become bright
orange with spring rain, shrinking and swelling with
intermittent rainfall. After releasing their spores, the
horns collapse, dry, and eventually fall off. The galls
die at this point, but may remain attached to the
juniper for a year or more. This rust is very obvious
on red cedar and other junipers during spring, when
the galls are covered with orange-brown gelatinous
masses. Rust spores formed on the gelatinous masses
cannot infect other junipers but can infect only
certain susceptible species of the rose family.
On apples and crabapples the circular,
yellow lesions on the upper surfaces of the leaves
appear shortly after bloom. Wet, rainy weather in
early spring is conducive for twig, leaf and fruit
infection of these deciduous hosts. Heavy rains
within the first two weeks of budbreak and leaf
expansion cause the disease to be more severe. As
the disease progresses, the undersides of the leaves
below the yellow spots will develop raised orange
structures that will ooze from the center, turn black,
and appear as black dots. In late summer, this area
will produce the orange and brown rust-colored
spores that infect the juniper host, completing the
cycle. Severely infected leaves may drop
prematurely, especially during a dry summer.
Integrated Pest Management Strategies
1. Prune. Prune out the galls on junipers, if you
wish, though be advised that the effectiveness of
pruning out the galls or removing junipers is
debatable since spores can travel long distances
with the wind.
2. Co-exist. Live with the disease. It rarely kills trees.
It may disfigure plants when twigs are infected.
3. preventive fungicide. Use preventive
fungicides labeled for use on apples. Fungicide
sprays are aimed at protecting developing foliage
from infection during the time the galls on the
junipers are orange and gelatinous. This usually
lasts for several weeks and fungicide applications
are not necessary once the galls become dry and
inactive. Pesticides registered for use include
captan, chlorothalonil (Daconil), copper,
mancozeb, maneb, sulphur, thiophanate methyl
(Cleary 3336), thiram, triadimefon, and ziram.
4. Mixing plants. Avoid planting juniper and rustsusceptible
hosts in close proximity to each other.
5. Resistant apple varieties. Use only resistant
varieties in planting. Remove and replace
diseased plants with resistant varieties.
Resistant varieties: ‘Redfree’, ‘Liberty’,
‘William’s Pride’, and ‘Freedom’.
Susceptible varieties: ‘Jonathan’, ‘Rome’,
‘Wealthy’, ‘York Imperial’, and ‘Golden
Delicious’. |