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DownloadPlant Diseases in Arkansas
Leaf Spot of Redtip Photinia

(3 minutes: 08 seconds) Video File Link WMV (high speed video)
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Audio/Video Script:

Dr. Steve Vann - Extension Urban Plant Pathologist

Now the Redtip Photinia is a very common landscape ornamental.  And most people use it as a privacy screen as you see here.  It makes a nice, dense barrier between the next-door neighbor’s.  However it is very susceptible to a fungus disease.

This disease is probably the major reason that the cooperative extension service no longer recommends this plant in the landscape.

This particular disease is going to affect the leaves primarily.  It causes a leaf spot.  Now, initially that spot will be a very small diameter spot.  It may be very inconspicuous at first but it progresses very rapidly. Before you know it, large areas may be affected by this spot.  And this particular spot, which is cause by a specific fungus, causes those leaves to fall off.  And this is where the damage actually becomes obvious, when those leaves start to drop. 

As the fungus progresses, it will cause large areas of the shrub to die.  The fungus spreads rapidly on the leaves usually by splashing water and wind.  It causes those leaves to fall off as you see here.  The fungus continues to survive on this dead tissue here. This is oftentimes a source for the disease the following season. Raking these leaves up can be very useful to minimize this disease for the next growing season.

Before we initiate control measures, we want to be sure this is the disease that we’re concerned about.  In order to do that, we would need to collect an appropriate sample to bring into your local extension office to have a qualified person to identify this particular disease.

To do that, what we normally recommend is taking your pruning snips and cutting a piece of tissue that contains those spots, and placing those into a plastic bag.

A sample of this type can be easily transported to your local extension office to have someone examine that tissue and give you an accurate diagnosis.

Now this particular fungus will also attack our Indian Hawthorne, or Raphiolepsis, but to a much lesser extent compared to the redtip.

Of course a lot of people select the redtip primarily because of that nice red foliage that we see in the springtime.  That’s one of the desirable characteristics for this particular landscape ornamental.  But again it’s very susceptible to this particular fungus disease.

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To learn more, contact your county Extension agent, and follow the links in this section.

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Last Date Modified 07/15/2008
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University of Arkansas • Division of Agriculture
Cooperative Extension Service
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Little Rock, Arkansas 72204 • USA
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