| Dutch elm disease is a wilt disease caused by the
fungus, Ceratocystis ulmi. It was described in Ohio
in 1930. By the 1980's, it could be found in most of
the U.S. It is a serious and fatal disease of American
elms. Even after years of study, there is no effective
cure for the disease.
Symptoms and Diagnosis
Symptoms develop rapidly during a period of 4–6
weeks after leaves reach full size. The first visible
symptoms are yellowing of foliage followed by
wilting and browning, a condition called flagging.
Usually a single branch is affected first; wilted
branches die rapidly and leaves brown, curl, and
often drop prematurely. The symptoms spread to
nearby branches and then to one whole part of the
tree. The entire tree finally wilts and dies. This
progression of symptoms may develop in one season
or may take several years. Positive diagnosis of the
disease requires a laboratory test to culture the
fungal pathogen.
Life Cycle
The fungus is primarily dependent on insectvectored
transmission from tree to tree over long
distances. There are 2 vectors for the fungus in
North America, the native American elm bark beetle
and the less prevalent European elm bark beetle.
Both of these beetles feed and breed under the bark
of living or recently dead elm trees or logs. They
carry the spores of the fungus from infected trees
and innoculate healthy trees as they feed. Both
species of elm bark beetles are effective carriers. The
cycle of infection by the fungus is tied to the life
cycle of the vectors. The beetles breed in recently
dead elm wood or weakened living trees. If the
fungus is present in breeding sites, emerging beetles
will carry spores to healthy elms and introduce the
fungus in feeding sites on young twigs. The beetles
can fly up to 1/4 mile in search of feeding or
breeding sites, but they may be blown many miles
by winds. The disease may also spread by root grafts
from a diseased elm tree to a healthy elm tree
provided that the root systems overlap.
Integrated Pest Management Strategies
1. There is no cure for the disease. If your elm tree
has leaves yellowing or wilting on one or more
branches, cut off several small branches and look
for brown streaking in the sapwood. If brown
streaking is evident, a laboratory test is suggested
for positive identification. This disease may be
confused with other canker and wilt pathogens
of elm.
2. Maintain plant health. Provide adequate amounts
of water and fertilizer. Mild cases of Dutch elm
disease may respond to pruning of diseased wood
if less than 5% of the tree is infected. Control the
insect vectors. Systemic fungicides injected into
the tree at 1–3 year intervals have proven
beneficial in providing protection. An arborist
should be consulted to discuss costs and
potential benefits.
3. Remove diseased trees. Severe cases require
complete removal of the tree. Wood should not
be saved for firewood. It should be chipped to
destroy the beetle’s breeding place. Nearby
American elms may also be infected through root
grafts. Destroying root grafts by mechanical
severing can slow the spread of the disease, if
done before the fungus has moved into healthy
elm trees. This may not be practical in a
home setting.
4. Replace diseased trees with varieties resistant to
Dutch elm disease. The true Chinese elm, Ulmus
parviflora, a tree with multi-colored bark, is one
choice. A related tree with a vase shape similar to
American elm is the Japanese zelkova, Zelkova
serrata. Both are resistant to Dutch elm disease
but not immune. |