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Damage

Tree disease and death can arise from a multitude of factors, including living organisms (biotic) such as insects and fungi, or abiotic agents such as frost, drought and chemical damage. In order to adjust management practices appropriately, it is crucial to correctly identify the cause of damage to trees. The following section summarizes some of the most common causes of tree damage or disease and provides guidelines for distinguishing between the different categories of damage, disease and decline.

 

Distinguishing between causes of tree health problems

Abiotic   Biotic
Non-living (eg. chemicals, frost, drought)   Living (Fungi, bacteria, insects)
Absence of host specificity   Often host specific
Non-infectious   Infectious (can spread from one tree to another)
Usually a gradient visible (worst near source of origin, with impact gradually becoming less as distance from source increases)
Damage usually of same age/phase of expression
  Often random in the plantation
Damage often at different stages of development as pathogen/pest spread from one tree to another

 

Signs and Symptoms

Disease and pest problems may be identified by observing certain signs and symptoms of infection / infestation. Signs include the presence of fungal fruiting bodies, or egg capsules of insects, while symptoms include leaf spots, defoliation, cracking of stems, wood stain etc. Characterizing the type of damage and the visible signs is useful in making accurate diagnoses.

 

 

New Publications

Burgess TI, Wingfield MJ. (2026) Unveiling a hidden menace: Invasive tree pathogens, less known but increasingly threatening Southern hemisphere forests. Annual Review of Phytopathology 64 10.1146/annurev-phyto-011325-100959
Motete T, Solís M, Hammerbacher A, Naidoo S. (2026) Gene expression profiling in Eucalyptus associates Phenylpropanoid resistance to Teratosphaeria destructans. Plant Pathology 10.1111/ppa.70207
Aylward J, Atkins S, Roets F, Danti R, Della Rocca G, Emiliani G, Fraser S, Garbelotto MM, Herron DA, Scali E, Wingfield BD, Wingfield MJ. (2026) High genetic diversity in the Cypress canker pathogen Seiridium cardinale in the Southern Hemisphere. Plant Pathology 75 10.1111/ppa.70212
van Heerden A, Pham NQ, Duong TA, Wingfield MJ, Wingfield BD. (2026) Draft genome sequence of Ganoderma philippii, a serious root rot pathogen of Eucalyptus in Southeast Asia. Australasian Plant Pathology 55:81. 10.1007/s13313-026-01159-1
Schoeman C, Roodt D, Mc Menamin A, Bezuidt O, Dithugoe C, Pinard D, Mizrachi E. (2026) Conserved symbiosis-associated genes in the cycad Encephalartos natalensis suggest co-option for cyanobacterial symbiosis. New Phytologist 10.1111/nph.71311