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Arboriculture & Urban Forestry Online
Volume 36, Issue 3 — May 2010
https://www.isa-arbor.com/Publications/Arboriculture-Urban-Forestry

Evaluation of Therapeutic Treatments to Manage Oak Bacterial Leaf Scorch    (View PDF)

John Hartman, Ed Dixon, and Shawn Bernick

Abstract: Bacterial leaf scorch is a very serious tree disease, especially for oaks in Kentucky, U.S. landscapes. From 2003 to 2007, several potentially therapeutic disease management treatments were tried on diseased pin oaks (Quercus palustris) growing in golf course, street tree, and horse farm environments. Treatments included root flare soil drenches of paclobutrazol, adjuvant-assisted basal trunk applications of anti-microbial compounds, and springtime root flare injections of oxytetracycline. Paclobutrazol drenches caused expected growth regulator effects but did not consistently reduce bacterial leaf scorch of golf course and street trees. Antibiotics applied directly to trunks of infected trees with an adjuvant had no effect on levels of bacterial leaf scorch. Compared to untreated trees, springtime root flare injections of oxytetracycline reduced scorch levels and delayed by about two weeks, the time of appearance of late summer scorch symptoms. Injections done three weeks after full expansion of first leaves provided better results than injections done earlier or later in the spring. Therapeutic treatments do not provide a cure for trees infected with bacterial leaf scorch, but may prolong tree life.

Keywords: Oxytetracycline; Paclobutrazol; Root Flare Injection; Streptomycin; Xylella fastidiosa.

https://doi.org/10.48044/jauf.2010.019


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