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  2. Acute oak decline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_oak_decline

    Acute oak decline (AOD) is a disease that infects oak trees originally described in the UK. It mainly affects mature oak trees of over 50 years old of both Britain's native oak species: the pedunculate oak ( Quercus robur ) and the sessile oak ( Quercus petraea ).

  3. Oak wilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak_wilt

    Oak wilt is a devastating exotic disease, killing some trees rapidly in a single season. [7] Oak wilt is an important disease in urban areas where trees are highly valued. . The disease reduces property values because of the loss of trees and is economically costly to the property owner since they or the local government must pay for tree remo

  4. Foamy bark canker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foamy_Bark_Canker

    The foamy bark canker is a disease affecting oak trees in California caused by the fungus Geosmithia sp. #41 and spread by the Western oak bark beetle (Pseudopityophthorus pubipennis). This disease is only seen through the symbiosis of the bark beetles and the fungal pathogen .

  5. Taphrina caerulescens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taphrina_caerulescens

    Taphrina caerulescens infects about 50 different species of oak (Quercus), predominately red oak (Q. erythrobalanus) and some white oak (Q. leurobalanus).Oak leaf blister is found across the country and in varying parts of the world but is most severe in the southeast and Gulf States of the U.S. [6] It is generally accepted that a T. caerulescens strain isolated from one host cannot be used to ...

  6. Cystotheca lanestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cystotheca_lanestris

    Cystotheca lanestris, the live oak witch's broom fungus, is a species of mildew that infects buds and induces stem galls called witch's brooms on oak trees in California, Arizona, and Mexico in North America. [2] [3] Witch's brooms are "abnormal clusters of shoots that are thickened, elongated, and highly branched."

  7. Botryosphaeria corticola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botryosphaeria_corticola

    Botryosphaeria corticola can be managed in high value trees, but there is no current management for forest trees. Carbendazim and thiophanate-methyl have shown to prevent infection in cork oak in Europe, where it is applied after cork has been harvested. Sanitation is the most common management technique for this disease. [13]

  8. Phytophthora ramorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phytophthora_ramorum

    Phytophthora ramorum is the oomycete known to cause the disease sudden oak death (SOD). The disease kills oak and other species of trees and has had devastating effects on the oak populations in California and Oregon, as well as being present in Europe. Symptoms include bleeding cankers on the tree's trunk and dieback of the foliage, in many ...

  9. Erysiphe alphitoides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erysiphe_alphitoides

    In mature trees the disease is generally less damaging, but in combination with other factors such as defoliation by insects can contribute to tree decline. A study of the effects of E. alphitoides on Quercus robur found it decreased stomatal conductance by 15–30%, did not affect the leaf mass to area ratio, decreased the nitrogen content of ...