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Horticulture & Home Pest News is filled with articles on current horticulture, plant care, pest management, and common household pests written by Iowa State University Extension specialists in the Departments of Entomology, Horticulture and Plant Pathology.
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Ash rustThis article was published originally on 6/25/1999
Typical symptoms of ash rust include the presence of bright orange pustules on leaves, petioles, and green twigs. Diseased tissue swells, causing distorted leaves and bends in petioles. The spores of the fungus, yellow-orange in color, appear over the swollen areas. The canker-like areas on twigs and petioles may lead to browning of leaves in the early summer. The spores produced on ash are incapable of reinfecting ash, but infect the marsh and cord grasses, the alternative hosts of this rust fungus. The causal fungus, Puccinia sparganioides, overwinters on these grasses and infects ash during warm wet weather in spring. The disease is rarely destructive enough to warrant special control measures.
Year of Publication:
1999
Issue:
IC-481(16) -- June 25, 1999
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