Plant species

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diseased branches host:ohioline.osu.edu

Listing 1 - 10 from 16 for diseased branches

X-DISEASE (Mycoplasma disease of peaches and nectarines), HYG-3206-98
... of apparently healthy twigs or branches with normal-looking leaves mixed with twigs or branches showing the symptoms described earlier. This mixture of healthy and diseased branches on the same tree occurs primarily during the first and second years of infection. Two to three years after initial infection, most branches will show symptoms. ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Phomopsis and Kabatina Tip Blights of Junipers, HYG-3056-96
... branches. Affected foliage first turns dull red or brown and finally ash-gray. Small gray lesions often girdle branch tips and cause blighting of foliage beyond the diseased ... appear. The terminal 2 to 6 inches of diseased branches throughout the juniper first turn dull green, then red ... adequate fertility, but do not over fertilize. Prune out diseased branch tips during dry summer weather and destroy ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Fertilizing, Pruning and Winterizing Roses, HYG-1205-96
... less complicated. The first step is to remove any dead, diseased or damaged wood. Cut the stems one inch below darkened ... . The third step is to locate crossing branches and remove the weakest one. Crossing branches may rub against each other, causing abrasions ... . A pruning basic that remains constant, though, is removing dead, diseased or damaged wood whenever noticed. This improves the appearance of ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Growing Clematis, HYG-1247-94
... since this plant climbs by twining petioles that cannot grasp thick branches or heavy trellising. If growing clematis on a wall or fence, ... to reduce the size or to form a good framework of branches. Do not cut into woody trunks. Plants in this group include: C. ... below the soil level. The usual treatment is to remove the diseased stem below the wilted section, even below soil line. Plants usually ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Growing Peaches and Nectarines in the Home Landscape, HYG-1406-98
... (a tree with a strong trunk and well positioned side branches); and to maintain the balance between vegetative growth and fruit ... inches. Cut off all side branches to leave a whip (a shoot without lateral branches or with lateral branches removed) that is 26 ... pruned initially to a whip. During the first year, remove diseased, broken, and low-hanging limbs. Then remove vigorous upright shoots ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Apple Powdery Mildew, HYG-3001-94
... surface of leaves, usually at the ends of branches. Small, whitish felt-like patches of fungal growth appear and quickly cover the entire leaf. Diseased leaves become narrow, crinkled, stunted and brittle ... not usually seen unless the disease has built up to high levels on susceptible cultivars. Diseased fruit has a fine network type surface blemish called russetting. Causal Organism and Disease ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Fire Blight of Apples, Crabapples and Pears, HYG-3002-94
... bacterial ooze may be visible on the surface of diseased tissue. These droplets contain millions of bacteria which can ... (winter) there is much less chance of spreading bacteria. Branches that are more than half-girdled by cankers should ... branches by removing dead tissue down to wood that appears healthy. If blighted twigs are pruned out during summer, cuts should be made l2 to l5 inches below diseased ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Peach Canker, HYG-3005-94
... dead and weakened twigs and branches, and in reduced yields. Symptoms The first symptoms appear in early spring as gummy drops of sap around wounded bark. The diseased inner bark begins to ... branch. Eradicate cankers and remove badly cankered limbs, branches or trees. Burn or remove all cankered limbs soon after pruning. These limbs or branches serve as a reservoir for the disease causing ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Spur Blight of Red Raspberries, HYG-3008-94
... on the side branches, cause premature leaf drop, and kill buds on the canes that later develop into fruit bearing side branches. In addition, berries produced on diseased canes may be ... petioles without leaf blades attached to the cane. When diseased canes become fruiting floricanes during the next season, the side branches growing from diseased buds are often weak and withered. Causal Organism ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Brown Rot of Stone Fruits, HYG-3009-94
... brown rot fungus may attack blossoms, fruit, spurs (flower and fruit bearing twigs), and small branches. The disease is most important on fruits just before ripening, during and after harvest. Under ... are touching one another. The fungus may move from diseased blossoms or fruit into the spurs. The fungus may then invade and cause diseased areas (cankers) on the twigs below. Succulent shoots ...
ohioline.osu.edu