When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: black fungus on trees leaves

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rhytisma acerinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhytisma_acerinum

    Tar spot does not usually have an adverse effect on the trees' long-term health. [1] R. acerinum is an Ascomycete fungus that locally infects the leaves of trees and is a biotrophic parasite. [2] The disease is cosmetic and is therefore usually controlled only with sanitation methods. [3]

  3. Dibotryon morbosum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dibotryon_morbosum

    Dibotryon morbosum or Apiosporina morbosa is a plant pathogen, which is the causal agent of black knot. [1] [2] It affects members of the Prunus genus such as; cherry, plum, apricot, and chokecherry trees in North America. The disease produces rough, black growths that encircle and kill the infested parts, and provide habitat for insects.

  4. Baudoinia compniacensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baudoinia_compniacensis

    The fungus often forms a black coating layer on tree bark and leaves. However, this does not seem to harm the plants by blocking the lenticels or significantly reduce their growth rates. Deciduous species also develop new leaves annually, rendering it less important when older leaves are covered by the growths.

  5. Scorias spongiosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scorias_spongiosa

    The large quantity of honeydew enables this fungus to grow to a large size, much bigger than other sooty mould fungi, which produce only a thin black layer on the surface of leaves. On tree trunks this fungus has been known to grow into a mass of hyphae as big as a football, but it is more usual for the agglomeration on branches or twigs to ...

  6. Stegophora ulmea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stegophora_ulmea

    Stegophora ulmea is a foliar disease of elms commonly known as black spot of elm, twig blight, and elm leaf scab. [1] It is characterized by yellow spots that become black spots on the leaves. The pathogen is an ascomycete fungus native to North America. Stegophora ulmea is its teleomorph name. [2]

  7. Slafractonia leguminicola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slafractonia_leguminicola

    Slafractonia leguminicola (formerly Rhizoctonia leguminicola) is a fungus that is a plant pathogen that most often attaches itself to the Trifolium pratense or red clover. It is also called black patch disease. The infection is first seen as small black patches on the leaves of red clover (often on the bottom of the leaves first) and spreads to ...

  8. Cherry leaf spot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherry_leaf_spot

    The cherry leaf spot fungus prefers moderately wet conditions, with temperatures above 60 °F (16 °C). Optimal temperature range for the spread of this fungus is between 60–68 °F (16–20 °C). [11] Serious infection of a tree occurs in years with many rainy periods and cooler summers.

  9. Spring black stem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_black_stem

    Numerous spots develop on the lower leaves, petioles, and stems. The disease produces small black spots on the leaves which eventually turn the leaf yellow, resulting in chlorosis and eventually cell death. [2] Spots are usually worse on older leaves. Stem lesions are dark brown to black and may cut the stem all the way around its surface.