Authors: G. H. Lacy, Professor of Plant Pathology, Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology and Weed Science, Virginia Tech; and Mary Ann Hansen, Extension Plant Pathologist, Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology and Weed Science, Virginia Tech
Publication Number: 450-608, Posted May 2000
Many ornamentals and other plants, including fruit trees and brambles, are affected by crown gall, a disease vectored by the bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The disease is especially common on rose and euonymus in the landscape; however, many other woody species, including cypress, hibiscus, lilac, flowering peach, privet, viburnum, and willow, are susceptible.
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Fig. 1. Crown gall on euonymus. |
Galls that develop on diseased plants may interfere with water and nutrient transport and result in unthrifty plants or death; however, in many cases the damage is mainly cosmetic. Usually galls are located on the stems or trunk at the crown (soil line). However, galls on some plants, such as willows, may be below the soil line on the roots and may be apparent only after trees are dug. Occasionally, galls are found on branches, as is often the case on wintercreeper euonymus (Euonymus fortunei) where stems are in contact with the soil.
Soil around plants with crown gall can be assumed to be infested with Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Nursery soil in which crown gall has occurred should be treated with a soil sterilant before replanting to a susceptible crop. In the landscape, planting susceptible species in soil known to be infested with A. tumefaciens should be avoided. Growing a nonsusceptible crop, such as grass, for three years can essentially eliminate the bacteria from the soil. Although the crown gall bacterium has a wide host range, many plants are immune to the disease and can be planted in sites with a history of crown gall. A list of species resistant or immune to the disease is provided in Table 1.
Moore, L. W., and G. Warren. 1979. Agrobacterium radiobacter strain 84 and biological control of crown gall. Annual Review of Phytopathology 17:163-179.
| Table 1. Woody ornamentals resistant or immune to crown gall | ||
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Abelia Ailanthus (tree-of-heaven) Albizia (silk tree) Amelanchier (serviceberry) Berberis (barberry) Betula (birch) Buxus (boxwood) Calluna (heather) Carpinus (hornbeam) Catalpa Cedrus (cedar) Cercis (redbud) Cladrastis (yellowwood) Cotinus (smoke tree) Cryptomeria Deutzia Fagus (beech) Ginko (maidenhair tree) Gymnocladus (Kentucky coffee-tree) |
Ilex (holly) Kalmia (mountain laurel) Koelreuteria (golden-rain tree) Laburnum (golden-chain tree) Larix (larch) Leucothoe Liquidambar (sweet gum) Liriodendron (tulip tree) Magnolia Mahonia (Oregon grape, holly grape) Nyssa (sour gum) Picea (spruce) Pieris (andromeda) Pyracantha (firethorn) Rhus (sumac) Sambucus (elderberry) Sassafras Tsuga (hemlock) Zelkova |
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