
Pests and diseases of forestry in New Zealand
Kirramyces eucalypti, septoria leaf blight of Eucalyptus
Back to leaf
spots of Eucalyptus
See also Mapping
Septoria leaf blight, Forest Health News 164, July 2006
7. Septoria leaf blight of Eucalyptus
Forest Pathology in New Zealand No. 1
Fungus: Kirramyces
eucalypti (Cooke & Massee) J. Walker, B. Sutton &
Pascoe.
Synonyms: Septoria pulcherrima
Gadgil and Dick, Phaeophleospora
eucalypti (Cooke & Massee) Crous, F.A. Ferreira & B.
Sutton.
Type of injury
Leaves become disfigured and tree growth may be affected. Heavy
infestations cause
severe leaf blotching which reduces net photosynthesis and results in
premature leaf casting.

Fig. 8 - Kirramyces eucalypti on Eucalyptus
nitens
.
Diagnostic features
Pale yellow spots on both sides of the leaf. Spot colour soon changes
to a deep carmine-red and finally
to brown with a residual carmine margin. Lesions regular in shape,
often merging together and covering
large areas of the leaf. Exuded spore masses visible on
the lesions as minute dark - coloured spots.
Hosts
Eucalyptus aggregata, E. aromaphloia,
E. benthamii,
E. camaldulensis, E. cephalocarpa, E. cinerea,
E. cordata,
E. cypellocarpa, E. dalrympleana subsp. dalrympleana, E. glaucescens,
E. globoidea,
E. globulus subsp. globulus, E. globulus subsp. maidenii, E. grandis, E. gunnii,
E. kitsoniana, E. macarthurii,
E. nicholii, E. nitens, E. obliqua,
E. ovata, E. perriniana, E. sideroxylon, E. urnigera, E. viminalis
subsp. viminalis.
Eucalyptus nitens is
particularly susceptible.
Distribution
Throughout New Zealand. First found in the central North Island
in 1981, Kirramyces eucalypti
had reached
Southland by 2008.
Disease development
Studies have been conducted mainly on Eucalyptus nitens which produces
foliage during most of the year in
the central North Island. New leaves emerging in spring become
infected, probably by means of spores released
from infected, residual, previous season's foliage. Microscopic
fruiting bodies are formed early within newly
infected leaves and exude spores as a sticky mass on the surface. They
are apparently dispersed by rain splash,
but the early appearance of spots on leaves in isolated, newly planted
stands suggests they are also airborne,
possibly in aerosols. Juvenile leaves become resistant after the first
few weeks, but infected foliage continues to
produce spores. On warmer sites an epidemic builds up throughout spring
and summer, which only slows down
as the production of new leaves and spores declines in autumn. Both
juvenile and mature leaves are affected, but
the latter only in severely infected stands, probably from an abundance
of spores dispersed from diseased juvenile foliage.
In such stands infected leaves are shed within one year. This leads to
the production of epicormic shoots whose leaves
are also susceptible, and complete transition to the adult phase is
delayed.
Economic importance
Septoria leaf blight causes moderate to severe growth loss,
depending on the region. A survey of E.
nitens stands
conducted in 2005 in the Rotorua-Bay of Plenty area revealed that the
disease was most severe within 20 km of the coast
where the climate was milder (mean annual temperature greater than ca.
12-13oC). Disease severity was generally low
in inland plantations where it was cooler, but there were local
topographic effects; trees were often heavily diseased on
valley floors, level tops and south facing slopes. Septoria leaf
blight, together with attack by the eucalyptus tortoise beetle,
Paropsis charybdis, has
contributed to the demise of a venture to produce fast growing hardwood
fibre for pulp from young
Eucalyptus nitens plantations
in the Bay of Plenty and central North Island.
Control
There appears to be little potential for an operational
fungicidal control of this disease. While several fungicides have shown
promise when applied regularly to runoff under experimental conditions,
a single aerial spray application was unsuccessful.
The ongoing steady progression of recurrent infection as new leaves
continue to emerge during spring and summer means
that effective control would require a large number of regular
applications of fungicide which is unlikely to be economic.
Genetics field trials have indicated that many families of E. nitens from Victoria are
susceptiple to the disease. Stock from
New South Wales was less affected, but tended to grow more slowly.
Therefore E. nitens should
not be planted on sites that
are likely to be more disease prone, but instead a different eucalypt
or other tree species should be substituted.
Bibliography
Dick, M. 1982: Leaf-inhabiting fungi of eucalypts in New Zealand.
New Zealand Journal of
Forestry Science 12: 525-537.
Dick, M. 1990: Leaf-inhabiting fungi of eucalypts in New Zealand. II.
New Zealand Journal of
Forestry Science 20: 65-74.
Dick, M.; Gadgil, P.D. 1983: Eucalyptus
leaf spots. New Zealand Forest
Service, Forest
Pathology in New Zealand No.1.
Hood, I.A.; Alexander, N.S. (2006): A survey of septoria leaf blight.
New Zealand Tree Grower 27 (3):
36-37,39.
Hood, I.A.; Alexander, N.S. (2006): Mapping
septoria leaf blight.
Forest Health News 164: 1
(New Zealand Forest Research Institute, July,
2006).
Hood, I.A.; Chapman, S.J.; Gardner, J.F.; Molony, K. (2002): Seasonal
development of septoria leaf blight
in young Eucalyptus nitens
plantations in New Zealand. Australian
Forestry 65: 153-164.
Hood, I.A.; Gardner, J.F.; Kimberley, M.O.; Molony, K. (2002):
Variation among eucalypt species in early
susceptibility to the leaf
spot fungi Phaeophleospora eucalypti
and Mycosphaerella spp.
New
Zealand Journal of Forestry Science 32: 235-255.
Compiled
: 1983, updated 1990, revised 2009.
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