UW-Madison/Extension Plant Disease Diagnostic Clinic (PDDC) Update October 16, 2020
The PDDC is now once again accepting physical samples for diagnosis, but due to COVID-19, only with limited hours and limited sample processing capacity. Click here for the current submission policy. The PDDC is continuing to provide diagnoses through examination of digital photographs. Digital diagnoses have not traditionally been included in the Wisconsin Disease Almanac, because such diagnoses are not verified through lab testing (critical in most situations for a diagnosis to be accurate). However, in an attempt to keep clients as informed as possible, digital diagnoses will be included in the Almanac until normal PDDC operations resume. For Almanac entries below, when a digital diagnosis would normally require a lab confirmation, the disease/disorder will be labeled as “suspected”. The following diseases/disorders have been identified at the PDDC from October 10, 2020 through October 16, 2020.
PLANT/SAMPLE TYPE | DISEASE/DISORDER | PATHOGEN | COUNTY |
FRUIT CROPS | |||
Apple (‘Honeycrisp’) | Zonal Chlorosis | None | Winnebago |
Apple (Unspecified) | Apple Scab (Suspected) Flyspeck Sooty Blotch Water Core (Suspected) | Venturia inaequalis Schizothyrium pomi Miscellaneous sooty blotch fungi None | La Crosse La Crosse La Crosse Taylor |
Blackberry | Root/Crown Rot Virus Disease (Suspected) | Unspecified root/crown rot fungi/water molds Unspecified virus(es) | Door Door |
To learn more about plant diseases and their control, as well as PDDC educational resources and activities, visit the PDDC website at pddc.wisc.edu, follow the clinic on Facebook and Twitter @UWPDDC or email pddc@wisc.edu to subscribe to the PDDC listserv “UWPDDCLearn”.
This article was posted in Apples, Berries, Disease and tagged Apple Scab, Apple Sooty Blotch, Apples, Berries, Blackberries, flyspeck, Honeycrisp, Root/Crown Rot, sooty blotch, virus disease, water core, zonal chilorosis.