1 de . all ., ;. CONTENTS Introduction Survey Methods Results 1 2 2 Summary References 9 13 First Printing 3M, October 1999 Information contained herein is available to all persons without regard to race, color, sex, or national origin. OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA 1 OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN NATIVE STANDS OF FLOWERING DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA A. K. HAGAN AND J. M. MULLEN INTRODUCTION Flowering dogwood (Cornusflorida), which ranks among the most popular and widely cultivated trees in residential landscapes, is native to Alabama. Showy bracts, excellent fall color, and good adaptation to a variety of soils have made the flowering dogwood a favorite among Alabama homeowners. Within the last two decades, the disease dogwood anthracnose has emerged as a serious threat to the health and beauty of both native stands and landscape plantings of flowering dogwood. First reported on flowering dogwood in New York in the mid- to late 1970s, this disease, which is caused by the fungus Discula destructiva, spread by the late 1980s into the Appalachian Mountains and nearby upland areas of northern Georgia and eastern Tennessee (1,3,7,8,10) Symptoms of dogwood anthracnose first appear in mid-spring on the leaves as spots with tan to brown centers and a purple border (Figure 1). These spots can quickly expand in size until the leaves are blighted and killed (3,7) (Figure 2). Blighted leaves often cling to the tree until the following spring. As the disease progresse, twigs are often invaded by D. destructiva and killed (Figure 3). Several years after the first symptoms are seen, elliptical cankers form at the base of the dead twigs on the scaffold branches and trunk. On dying trees, numerous water sprouts or epicormic shoots often appear along the trunk (Figure 4). Typically, this disease begins on the lower limbs and gradually spreads up through the tree canopy. A survey conducted by the USDA Forest Service personnel during the winter of 1989-1990 showed that dogwood anthracnose had spread into native stands of flowering dogwood in National Forest-managed lands at selected locations in the northern third of Alabama (8). County-by-county data concerning the distribution and severity of this potentially fatal disease of flowering dogwood were, however, not generated. Spot anthracnose, which is caused by the fungus Elsinoe corni, occurs wherever flowering dogwood are found and is reportedly most common in landscape Hagan is a professor and Mullen is a diagnostician inthe Department of Plant Pathology. 2 ALABAMA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION plantings on trees grown in full sun. Although this disease is thought to have little impact on tree health, bracts and sometimes the leaves of susceptible flowering dogwoods often are badly defaced or distorted (9) (Figures 5 and 6). Information concerning the occurrence of spot anthracnose in native stands of flowering dogwood in Alabama is not available. Blighting of the bracts and flowers of flowering dogwood has been attributed to the disease Botrytis blight (Figure 7). Although the causal fungus, Botrytis cinerea, is a common and often destructive pathogen on annual and perennial flowers, this disease has rarely been reported on flowering dogwood in residential or commercial landscapes. As is the case with spot anthracnose, no information is available concerning the occurrence or distribution of Botrytis blight on flowering dogwood in Alabama. SURVEY METHODS Between mid-May and mid-June in 1991, 1992, and 1993, selected forest sites were surveyed by Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station personnel to determine the distribution and severity of leaf and bract diseases in native stands of flowering dogwood in Alabama. Survey sites, which are listed by county and location in Table 1, were located in Alabama state parks, national forests, national wildlife refuges, and community hunting lands in the northern half of Alabama (see map). Strip cruise plots containing six to 382 flowering dogwoods ranging in size from seedlings to mature trees were located along access roads as well as hiking and riding trails. The location of each plot was marked on U.S. Geological Survey (1:24000 scale) topographic maps and the approximate elevation noted. Although the majority of survey sites were visited each year, a few were checked only once. The foliage and bracts of each flowering dogwood noted within the plot area were examined for the characteristic symptoms of dogwood anthracnose, spot anthracnose, and Botrytis blight. In 1992 and 1993, the severity of dogwood anthracnose was rated using a modified Miekle-Langdon scale: 0 = dead tree; 1 = 75 to 100% of leaves diseased with numerous epicormic shoots on the main trunk and severe limb dieback; 2 = 50 to 75% of leaves diseased with some epicormic shoot development and extensive shoot dieback; 3 = 25 to 50% of leaves diseased with some twig dieback; 4 = 1 to 25% of leaves spotted or blighted; 5 = tree healthy. In those same two years, the incidence of dogwood anthracnose, spot anthracnose, and Botrytis blight was expressed as a percentage of total number of trees examined. Bract and leaf samples collected from selected symptomatic trees were examined for the presence of the fruiting bodies and conidia of the causal fungi of these diseases. RESULTS Although no numerical disease ratings were taken in 1991, observations concerning the occurrence and distribution of dogwood anthracnose at each site were recorded (Table 1). That year, heaviest leaf spot and blight symptoms were seen at elevations of 1,600 to 1,800 feet on flowering dogwood at one site in Monte Sano OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA 3 State Park in Madison County and along several hiking trails in DeSoto State Park in DeKalb County. The twig and limb dieback, which is usually associated with severe disease outbreaks, was not observed but few of the trees at either park were free of symptoms of dogwood anthracnose. At both locations, smaller flowering dogwoods growing in heavy shade suffered the heaviest spotting and blighting of the leaves. At one site at Guntersville State Park in Madison County and along the Little River Canyon in DeKalb County, symptoms of dogwood anthracnose were seen on a few scattered trees. Elevation at both sites was approximately 1,100 to 1,200 feet. This disease was also found at an elevation of 1,000 feet on a single flowering dogwood at Buck's Pocket State Park in DeKalb County and Talladega National Forest in Cleburne County. Flowering dogwood at several other sites in the Talladega National Forest in Cleburne County as well as nearby Cheah State Park in Clay County were free of symptoms of dogwood anthracnose. Also, none of the trees checked in Wheeler State Park in Lauderdale County, Wind River State Park in Tallapoosa County, and Oak Mountain State Park were diseased. In 1991, no observations concerning the occurrence of spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight were made. For 1992, the survey area was broadened to include several additional counties in northwestern Alabama. At several survey sites, the incidence and severity of dogwood anthracnose were substantially higher as compared with levels seen in the previous year. At several state park or national forest sites in Madison, DeKalb, and Cleburne Counties, dogwood anthracnose damaged 81 to 100% of the flowering dogwoods examined (Table 1). Heaviest disease-related blighting of the leaves, shoot dieback, and epicormic shoot development, as indicated by a disease severity rating of 2.12, was noted in a stand of flowering dogwood at Monte Sano State Park in Madison County. At this and a Cleburne County site, mature flowering dogwoods, whose canopies were exposed to direct sunlight for much of the day, appeared to suffer far less damage than did trees in the shaded forest understory. Considerable leaf blight and shoot dieback were also observed on trees examined at several sites in DeSoto State Park and Little River Canyon in DeKalb County. In northeast Alabama, light to moderate spotting of the leaves was recorded at elevations of 600 to 1,000 feet at several additional forested sites in DeKalb, Cleburne, Clay, and Marshall Counties. In most instances, the percentage of diseased trees was quite low and damage was very minor. A single symptomatic flowering dogwood was noted along a trail in Bankhead National Forest in Lawrence County. Trees at two sites in Clay County were free of symptoms of dogwood anthracnose as were those examined in Tallapoosa, Shelby, Lauderdale, and Winston Counties. Overall, the incidence of spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight was far below that recorded for dogwood anthrancose. In 1992, spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight were noted at six and three survey sites, respectively, as compared with 16 for dogwood anthracnose (Tables 1, 2). Across all 28 survey sites, incidence of spot anthracnose on 3,447 trees was 1.1% (Table 2). At a single site in DeSoto State Park, spot anthracnose was seen on the foliage of a number of trees growing TABLE 1. DISTRIBUTION AND SEVERITY OF DOGWOOD ANTHRACNOSE ON FLOWERING DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA County Location Elevation No. trees Disease % disNo. diseased trees eased trees rating' 1992 No. trees 3 No. diseased trees Disease %diseased trees rating 1993 0 0 0 0 2.3 96 15 91 86 85 100 81 16 58 5 5 5 5 4.98 3.52 4.84 3.41 4 3.5 2.58 3.56 4.81 4.19 ns 108 89 ns ns ns 116 166 124 106 ns 170 143 ns ns 44 44 56 71 78 126 78 89 72 100 3.91 2.37 Blount Calhoun Cherokee Clay Clay Clay Clay Clebume Cleburne Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Etowah Jackson Jefferson Lauderdale Rickwood Cavern SP Rabbittown, Talladega NF Little River Canyon Chinnabee Trail, Talladega NF Chinnabee Trail, Talladega NF Cheaha SP, Talladega NF Able Gap, Talladega NF Coleman Lake, Talladega NF Brymer Mountain, Talladega NF Little River Canyon Little River Canyon Nature Trail, DeSoto SP Rhododendron Trail, DeSoto SP Rhododendron Trail, DeSoto SP Picnic Area, Buck's Pocket SP High Bluff Trail, Buck's Pocket SP Sauty Creek Trail, Buck's Pocket SP Lookout Mountain Skyline Wildlife Management Area Botanical Gardens Wheeler SP 2 900 900 1,200 1,200 800 1,200 800 1,200 1,000 1,200 1,000 1,600 1,800 1,600 1,100 1,000 900 800 1,600 600 600 43 ns ns 84 47 94 87 155 127 66 70 179 127 186 44 41 ns ns ns ns 122 0 0 0 0 2 149 19 60 60 152 127 151 7 24 4 153 38 103 165 142 26 13 7 70 0 0 3.4 92 31 97 97 99 59 30 13 99 0 0 4.96 3.62 4.57 3.31 2.54 2.01 4.25 4.63 4.88 2.38 5 5 > C ;~m m z- 0 0 5 'Disease severity was evaluated on each tree using a modified Miekle-Langdon scale: 0 = dead tree; 1= 75 to 100% of leaves diseased with numerous water sprouts; 2 = 50 to 75% of leaves diseased with extensive twig dieback; 3 = 25 to 50% of leaves diseased with light dieback; 4 = 1 to 25% of leaves diseased; 5 = healthy tree 3 2SP = State Park, NF = National Forest, NWR = National Wildlife Refuge, CP = City Park ns = not surveyed this year U-) -1 TABLE 1, CONTINUED. DISTRIBUTION AND SEVERITY OF DOGWOOD ANTHRACNOSE ON FLOWERING DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA County Location Elevation No. trees No. diseased trees % diseased trees Disease rating No. trees No. diseased trees % diseased trees 1993 Disease rating 0 0 c 0 m 1992 Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Limestone Madison Madison Marshall Marshall Marshall Marshall Marshall Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby St. Clair Winston Winston Winston Total trees Trail223H, Bankhead NF Bankhead NF Logging Road, Bankhead NF Sipsey Wilderness, Bankhead NF Wheeler NWR Monte Sano SP Green Mountain, Huntsville CP Nature Trail, Guntersville SP Luckskillet Trail, Guntersville SP Cascade Trail, Guntersville SP Bevil Trail, Guntersville SP Guntersville CP South Rim Trail, Oak Mountain SP Double Oak Trail, Oak Mountain SP Peavine Trail, Oak Mountain SP Nature Tail, Oak Mountain SP St. Claire Community Hunting Area Sipsey Wilderness, Bankhead NF Houston Rec. Area, Bankhead NF Bankhead NF 900 900 1,000 900 600 1,700 1,300 1,100 700 800 800 600 1,000 800 1,000 600 800 600 600 800 104 ns 72 108 ns 382 ns 116 305 72 99 ns 140 179 ns ns 6 92 ns 3,147 1 0 0 382 43 18 2 3 0 0 1 0 0 100 37 6 3 3 0 0 4.98 5 5 2.12 4.54 4.72 4.86 4.84 4 5 ns 102 ns ns 29 201 266 198 122 ns ns 79 ns 315 62 133 141 ns ns 83 3,190 0 0 201 242 95 27 10 0 0 0 0 1 1,464 z 0 0 0 100 91 48 22 13 0 0 0 0 1 45.9 5 5 1.42 3.44 4.45 4.89 4.88 5 5 5 5 4.98 m 0 C11 rn m m z 0 0 0 0M 0 z z 0 z W 0 0 1,200 0 0 38.1 5 5 'Disease severity was evaluated on each tree using a modified Miekle-Langdon scale: 0 = dead tree; 1 = 75 to 100% of leaves diseased with numerous water sprouts; 2 = 50 to 75% of leaves diseased with extensive twig dieback; 3 = 25 to 50% of leaves diseased with light dieback; 4 =1 to 25% of leaves diseased; 5 = healthy tree 2 SP = State Park, NF = National Forest, NWR = National Wildlife Refuge, CP = City Park 3 ns = not surveyed this year. ALABAMA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION ij "f b Clockwise from left: Figure 1. Typical leaf spot symptoms of dogwood anthracnose on q? sleaves w~ood. of flow~ering dog- +^ Figure 2. At later stages of this disease, extensive blighting of the leaves r may be seen. ?ty:Ylungus Figcure 3. Once the causal invades the tw\igs and scaffold branches, a marge pri on of the tree nA\ .. dic. OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA Clockwise from above: Figure 4. On seerclv dogwood anthracnosedamaged trees, numerous water sprouts or epicormic shoots appear on the tree trunk. Figure 5. Spotting and distortion of the leaves are common symptoms of spot anthracnose. Figure 6. Spotting and distortion of the bracts are the most noticeable symptoms of spot anthracnose on flowering dogwood. Figure 7. Large, spreading leaf spot that is associated with Botrytis blight on flowering dogwood. 8 ALABAMA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION along the north rim of the Little River Canyon in light shade to full sun. This disease was never found at this or any other survey site on trees growing under heavy shade. On the other hand, the occurrence of Botrytis blight, which was noted only on 0.1% of trees examined, was limited to heavily shaded areas (Table 2). Usually, the brown, spreading leaf lesions associated with this disease developed where senescing bracts had fallen on the leaves. In 1993, sites in Calhoun, Etowah, Madison, Jackson, Limestone, Cherokee, and St. Clair Counties were added to the dogwood survey while several other sites, particularly in the Bankhead National Forest, were deleted. The health of flowering dogwoods continued to deteriorate at several sites in northeast Alabama, particularly those at higher elevations in DeKalb and Madison Counties (Table 1). As indicated by a disease rating of 1.42, many of the understory trees examined at Monte Sano State Park in Madison County were either dead or close to death. Extensive blighting of the leaves and limb dieback was recorded within the canopy of nearly all of the large flowering dogwoods, even those growing in full sun. Although nearly all the trees checked in a nearby Huntsville City park (elevation 1,300 feet.) were diseased, damage on the majority of those flowering dogwoods was limited to light to moderate spotting of the foliage. In Dekalb County, declines in tree health similar to those found at Monte Sano State Park were seen on flowering dogwood on Lookout Mountain at several sites in DeSoto State Park and along the north rim of the Little River Canyon. Widespread blighting of the leaves, limb dieback, epicormic shoot growth, and some tree mortality were also noted on flowering dogwood on forested sites in northern Jackson County near Tennessee and the south rim of the Little River Canyon in Cherokee County. At most of the remaining survey sites in northeast Alabama, particularly those at lower elevations, tree damage was generally limited to light to moderate blighting of the foliage and some limb dieback (Table 2). In the Talladega National Forest, disease levels on flowering dogwood progressively declined from Rabbittown in the northeast to Able Gap in the southwest. Similar declines in disease were seen on flowering dogwood checked at the Lookout Mountain sites in Marshall and Etowah Counties, which are southwest of stands of heavily damaged trees on that same mountain at higher elevations in nearby Cherokee and DeKalb Counties. At two sites above Lake Guntersville in Marshall County, light spotting of leaves was seen on a handful of trees. Low levels of dogwood anthracnose, which were noted at two sites in Bucks Pocket State Park were similar to those seen in the previous year. As was the case in 1992, dogwood anthracnose was confirmed at one site in the Bankhead National Forest in 1993 on only a single flowering dogwood tree in Winston County. No anthracnose-damaged dogwoods were found at survey sites along the Tennessee River in Lauderdale, Limestone, and Madison Counties. In addition, flowering dogwoods inspected at sites in Jefferson, Shelby, St. Clair, and Tallapoosa Counties were also free of this disease. Across all 1993 survey sites, the occurrence of spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight in native stands of flowering dogwood, which was similar to levels seen in the previous year, was again very low (Table 2). Incidence of spot anthracnose and OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA 9 Botrytis blight on all flowering dogwood inspected at the 28 survey sites was 0.3% and 1.5%, respectively. In 1993, spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight were found at a total of four and nine survey sites, respectively. The highest number of spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight-damaged dogwoods was recorded at a partially shaded lake-front site in Wheeler State Park in Lauderdale County (Table 2). SUMMARY Dogwood anthracnose was the most common and destructive of the three foliar diseases recorded during the spring of 1991, 1992, and 1993 in native stands of flowering dogwood in northeastern Alabama. Incidence and severity of this disease peaked on flowering dogwood in the Appalachian Mountains and uplands of the adjoining Piedmont region. Native stands of flowering dogwood hardest hit by this disease were located in Calhoun, Cherokee, Clebure, DeKalb, Jackson, and Madison Counties. By 1993, numerous flowering dogwoods at several survey sites, as indicated by disease ratings below 3.0, had suffered extensive foliar blighting, limb dieback, or had succumbed to dogwood anthracnose (Table 2). Also, disease incidence figures, which often ranged between 90 and 100% at these sites, have clearly demonstrated the widespread distribution of dogwood anthracnose in this region of Alabama. Disease incidence and severity quickly declined at sites southwest of a line running diagonally from Huntsville in Madison County to Wedowee in Randolph County. Outside of the extreme northeastern corner of Alabama, the incidence of dogwood anthracnose in native stands of flowering dogwood was extremely low. Over the survey period, only two very lightly diseased trees were found at the upland sites in the Bankhead National Forest in northwest Alabama. In 1991, Forest Service personnel also found at least one diseased tree during a survey of the Bankhead National Forest as well as along the Natchez Trace in Lauderdale County (8). A single tree was also identified in Birmingham near Legion Field. Dogwood anthracnose was not found at any of the survey sites in the Tennessee River Valley west of Huntsville. Throughout the survey period, trees in Blount, Jefferson, Shelby, St. Clair, and Tallapoosa Counties were also free of this disease. Previous surveys in other southeastern states have suggested that dogwood anthracnose is most damaging in both forest and landscape settings at elevations above 3,000 feet (1). Damage has been found on flowering dogwood at lower elevations but was usually less severe (1). On the other hand, Chellemi et al. (2) showed that elevation had only a minor influence on the incidence of dogwood anthracnose. In areas of Alabama where this disease was already well established, foliar blighting and limb dieback was more intense at 1,200 to 1,700 feet than at lower elevations. Severe foliar blighting, limb dieback, and in some cases tree death were recorded at all sites in the Little River Canyon, Coleman Lake in the Talladega National Forest, DeSoto State Park, Skyline Wildlife Management Area, and particularly at Monte Sano State Park. At Buck's Pocket State Park, disease intensity was considerably lower at elevations below 1,000 feet than at higher elevations in nearby DeSoto State Park. Similar observations concerning the re- 10 ALABAMAAGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION Location of survey sites in Alabama. OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA TABLE 11 2. INCIDENCE OF SPOT ANTHRACNOSE AND BOTRYTIS BLIGHT ON FLOWERING DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA County Location No. Trees Trees No. Trees Trees trees w/SA1 w/BB 2 trees w/SA w/BB % 1992 -O Blount Calhoun Cherokee Clay Clay Clay Clay Cleburne Cleburne Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Dekalb Etowah Jackson Jefferson Lauderdale Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Limestone Madison Madison Madison Marshall Marshall Marshall Marshall Marshall Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby St. Clair 1 I1993 0 ns 4 43 Rickwood Cavern SP ns Rabbittown, Talladega NF ns Little River Canyon 84 Chinnabee Trail, Talladega NF 47 Chinnabee Trail, Talladega NF 94 Cheaha SP, Talladega NF 87 Able Gap, Talladega NF 155 Coleman Lake, Talladega NF 127 Brymer Mountain, Talladega NF 66 Little River Canyon 70 Little River Canyon 179 Nature Trail, DeSoto SP 127 Rhododendron Trail, DeSoto SP 186 Rhododendron Trail, DeSoto SP 44 Picnic Area, Buck's Pocket SP High Bluff Trail, Buck's Pocket SP 41 Sauty Creek Trail, Buck's Pocket SP ns ns Lookout Mountain Skyline Wildlife Management Area ns ns Botanical Gardens 122 Wheeler SP 104 Trai1223H, Bankhead NF ns Bankhead NF 72 Logging Road, Bankhead NF 108 Sipsey Wilderness, Bankhead NF ns Wheeler NWR 382 Monte Sano SP ns Green Mountain, Huntsville CP ns Wheeler NWR 116 Nature Trail, Guntersville SP 305 Luckskillet Trail, Guntersville SP 72 Cascade Trail, Guntersville SP 99 Bevil Trail, Guntersville SP ns Guntersville CP South Rim Trail, Oak Mountain SP 140 Double Oak Trail, Oak Mountain SP 315 ns Peavine Trail, Oak Mountain SP ns Nature Tail, Oak Mountain SP St. Claire Community Hunting Area ns 3 r, 0.9 0 0 0 2.3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13.4 0 0 0 0 108 89 ns ns 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.9 0 1.6 0 0 0 ns 116 166 124 106 ns 170 143 ns ns 44 44 56 71 78 126 ns 102 ns ns 0 0.6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.8 0 0 0 0 0 0 2.3 0 0 3.8 15.9 2.9 0 6.8 0 0 0 3.2 0 0 0 0.3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 29 201 266 18 198 122 ns 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4.1 0 0 0.6 ns 79 ns 315 62 133 141 0 0 0 0 0 3.8 1.1 0 0 0 3 2 SP = State Park, NF = National Forest, NWR BB=botyrtis blight. SA=spot anthracnose. 4 ns = not surveyed this year. National Wildlife Refuge, CP = City Park. 12 TABLE ALABAMAAGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION 2, CONTINUED. INCIDENCE OF SPOT ANTHRACNOSE AND BOTRYTIS BLIGHT ON FLOWERING DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA County Location No. Trees Trees No. Trees Trees trees w/SA 1 w/BB 2 trees w/SA w/BB 1992 1993 0 0 1.1 179 ns ns 83 3,190 0 1.1 Tallapoosa Winston Winston Winston Total trees Wind River SP Sipsey Wilderness Houston Rec. Area, Bankhead NF Bankhead NF 163 6 92 ns 3,147 0.6 0 8.7 0 10 3 2 SP = State Park, NF = National Forest, NWR = BB=botyrtis blight. 1SA=spot anthracnose. National Wildlife Refuge, CP = City Park. 4ns = not surveyed this year. lationship of dogwood anthracnose to elevation were made in Guntersville State Park in Marshall County as well as the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge, Green Mountain City Park, and Monte Sano State Park in Madison County. Failure to find this disease at higher elevations in the southern half of the Talladega National Forest, Cheah State Park, and Oak Mountain State Park is due entirely to the fact that these sites were outside the range of dogwood anthracnose at the time of this survey. In other states, the worst foliar blighting and tree mortality were observed on flowering dogwood growing under heavy shade on both forested and landscape sites (3,4). Erbaugh et al. (5) recently confirmed that low light intensity greatly enhanced the severity of dogwood anthracnose. In Alabama, symptom severity and tree mortality was also highest on understory flowering dogwood growing on heavily shaded sites. Where disease incidence was high, particularly at Monte Sano and DeSoto State Parks, damage was always much lower on trees growing in partial to full sun than on those found under heavy shade. Overall, dogwood anthracnose appears to be spreading in a southwesterly direction through the Talladega National Forest towards the Birmingham metropolitan area as well as along Lookout Mountain into Gadsden. Disease incidence and severity, which peaked near Alabama's border with Georgia and Tennessee, declined sharply as the distance of the survey sites from the borders of these two states increased. Although continued spread of this disease across the northern half of Alabama is likely, the rate of spread and damage potential is difficult to predict. In Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, disease outbreaks have, however, been largely confined to the Appalachian Mountains and Piedmont region (1,3). Spread of this disease from the cooler upland areas into the hotter forest and landscape plantings in the coastal plain region of these four states has been slow. A similar distribution pattern will likely be repeated in Alabama's coastal plain where hot summer weather should suppress secondary disease spread and further reduce the risk of damaging outbreaks of dogwood anthracnose. On the other hand, the impact of spot anthracnose and Botrytis blight on the health and vitality of flowering dogwood in Alabama's forests was minimal. Both OCCURRENCE OF DISEASES IN DOGWOOD IN NORTH ALABAMA 13 diseases were distributed throughout north Alabama but incidence of either of these diseases at any specific survey site usually was minimal. As has been previously noted (6), the occurrence of spot anthracnose was restricted to trees growing in partial to full sunlight. Flowering dogwoods found in moderate to heavy shade were consistently free of this disease. In fact, planting flowering dogwood on partially to heavily shaded sites is among the most effective controls for spot anthracnose in residential and commercial landscapes. Like dogwood anthracnose, development of Botrytis blight was largely limited to trees in partial to heavy shade. Typically, symptoms were seen shortly after bract fall and only a few, scattered leaves on any given tree were damaged. As a result of the sporadic occurrence of Botrytis blight, specific control measures for this disease rarely need to be implemented. REFERENCES (1) Anderson, R. L., J. L. Knighten, M. Windham, K. Langdon, F. Hendrix, and R. Roncadori. 1994. Dogwood anthracnose and its spread in the south. For. Serv. Prot. Rep. 26. (2) Chellemi, D. O., K. O. Britton, and W. T. Swank. 1992. Influence of site factors on dogwood anthracnose in the Nantahala Mountain Range of Western North Carolina. Plant Dis. 76:915-918. (3) Daughtrey, M. L, C. R. Hibben, K. O. Britton, M. T. Windham, and S. C. Redlin. 1996. Dogwood Anthracnose, understanding a disease new to North America. Plant Dis. 80: 349-358. (4) Daughtrey, M. L., C. R. Hibben, G. W. Hudler. 1988. Cause and control of dogwood anthracnose in northeastern United States. J. of Arboric 14:159-164. (5) Erbaugh, D. K., M. T. Windham, A. J. W. Stodola, and R. M. Auge. 1995. Light intensity and drought stress as predisposition factors for dogwood anthracnose. J. Environ. Hort. 13:186-189. (6) Hagan, A. K. and J. M. Mullen. 1995. Dogwood diseases in Alabama. AL. Coop. Ext. Serv. Cir. 511. (7) Hibben, C. R. and M. L. Daughtrey. 1988. Dogwood anthracnose in northeastern United States. Plant Dis. 72: 199-203. (8) Knighten, J. L. and R. L. Anderson. 1992. Results of 1991 dogwood anthracnose impact assessment and pilot test in the Southeastern United States. USDA For. Ser. Prot. Rep. R8-PR23. (9) Jenkins, A. E and A. A. Bitancourt. 1948. A spot anthracnose of flowering dogwood. Plant Dis. Rep. 32:253-255. (10) Sherald, J. L., Stidham, T. M., Hadidian, J. M. and Hoeldke, J. E. 1996. Progression of the dogwood anthracnose epidemic and the status of flowering dogwood in Catoctin Mountain Park. Plant Dis. 80:310-312. AUBURN UNIVERSITY With an agricultural research unit in every major soil area, Auburn University serves the needs of field crop, livestock, forestry, and horticultural producers in each region in Alabama. Every citizen of the state has a stake in this research program, since any advantage from new and more economical ways of producing and handling farm products directly benefits the consuming public. Research Unit Identification * " Main Agricultural Experiment Station, Auburn. " Alabama A&M University E. V. Smith Research Center, Shorter. 1. Tennessee Valley Research and Extension Center, Belle Mina. 2. Sand Mountain Research and Extension Center, Crossville. 3. North Alabama Horticulture Station, Cuilman. 4 Upper Coastal Plain Research Station, Winfield. 5. Chilton Area Horticulture Station Clanton. 6. Piedmont Research Station, Camp Hill. 7. Prattville Experiment Field, Prattville. 8 Black Belt Research and Extension Center, Marion Junction. 9. Lower Coastal Plain Research Station. Camden. 10. Monroeville Experiment Field, Monroeville. 11. Wiregrass Research and Extension Center, Headland. 12 Brewton Experiment Field, Brewton. 13. Ornamental Horticulture Station, Spring Hill 14 Gulf Coast Research and Extension Center, Fairhope.