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FGCA > Conservation of Genetic Diversity > Species at Risk > Butternut > Butternut Canker | |
Butternut Canker
A newly infected tree does not exhibit any obvious symptoms until the disease begins to colonize and kill the inner bark. It is believed that butternut trees are infected through buds, leaf scars, and insect wounds or other openings in the bark. As the disease progresses throughout, branch dieback becomes visible.
The fungus begins in the lower crown of the tree, in the shade and protection of the canopy. The spores are tightly held in a jelly-like substance that oozes from the bark, and are only released by forces such as strong wind and rain. It is believed that the spores are transmitted to the rest of the tree in tiny water droplets produced during heavy downpours.
A common response associated with this disease is epicormic branching (the formation of shoots along the trunk of a tree caused by injury or disease). These emanate from the callus tissue around the edge of the canker, and do not survive for very long—succumbing early themselves to the effects of the disease. Read more on: |
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