Happy October and end of harvest to all apple growers reading this post. I wanted to take a few moments today to address the Glomerella leaf spot and bitter rot concerns growers throughout the region have been experiencing this season. The first thing I want to remind everyone of is the Disease Triangle. Remember, for a disease like GLS and bitter rot to occur, three things need to happen:
1.The pathogen needs to be present. The Colletotrichum pathogen(s) causing bitter rot and GLS are typically always present and active during the spring, summer, and fall in Western NC. It’s important to realize that the pathogen hangs out and is present on hosts other than apples: weeds and grasses, ornamental and plants along wooded borders, other fruit and vegetable crops, etc. It even hides asymptomatically in the leaves or apple cultivars that do not show symptoms of GLS (e.g. Honeycrisp and Rome Beauty). So, even if you don’t see any bitter rot or GLS symptoms on your apples, spores may be coming from somewhere else.
2.Increasing acreage of susceptible hosts (e.g. cultivars). Besides the normal GLS-susceptible cultivars historically grown in the region, growers are increasingly becoming daredevils and planting popular “new” varieties such as ‘Honeycrisp’ and ‘Evercrisp’ to accommodate consumer demand. We are beginning to discover that some of these newer cultivars tend to be infected by more aggressive Colletotrichum species which also are less susceptible to strobilurin fungicides. They may even have a shorter incubation/latent period which may further effect fungicide timing.
3.A conducive environment for disease development must be present. This year we seemed to have the trifecta: Early freezes resulted in a lost crop, which resulted in a more relaxed fungicide schedule on the affected trees, which resulted in more inoculum available for trees with fruit. Furthermore, the constant rain, heat, and humidity did not prevent favorable conditions. While it’s normal to consider the weather only, I urge you to also consider the microclimate of your tree. To a fungus, leaf wetness and heat from dew is largely similar to that of rainfall (with the exception that rainfall facilitates spore dispersal more than dew). In a practical management sense: Even though it’s “dry” this does not mean you can wait 14, 17, or 20 days between fungicide applications. Even in June, when we had relatively little rain, conditions were still ideal for infection to occur.