
Cherry (Prunus)
Plant Health Problems
Diseases caused by Fungi:
Brown rot, Monilinia fructicola.
This is the same disease that occurs on peach and is the most
common and destructive disease on cherry in Connecticut. The
disease is especially severe in wet, humid weather. Brown rot
causes blossom and twig blights, twig cankers, and fruit rots.
The symptoms of the disease are very similar to those described
on peach. See Peach for a more
detailed discussion of this disease.
As is the case of peach, sanitation is essential for controlling
brown rot. Mummified fruit that remains on the tree should be
removed and destroyed, and all dead and cankered twigs should be
pruned and removed from the vicinity of the tree. For more
information, see the fact sheet on Disease Control for the Home
Cherry Orchard.
Leaf spot, Blumeriella jaapii.
Leaf spot occurs on both sweet and sour cherries. It appears as
reddish-purple spots on the leaves, these spots later turning
brown. The centers of the spot may or may not fall out giving a
"shot-hole" effect. The fungus causes a yellowing and
dropping of the foliage. Trees that are defoliated year after
year tend to have poor vigor and to be susceptible to winter
injury. Although infections generally occur only on the leaves,
they can occur on fruit, stems and petioles when the disease is
severe. In wet springs, infection may occur early in the season,
but with dry spring weather the spotting may be delayed until
after fruit harvest. The disease is most common on sour cherry,
although sweet cherry is quite susceptible. The disease
overwinters on diseased leaves on the ground.
Therefore, control measures should begin with the removal of the
overwintering leaves from beneath the tree and in the surrounding
area before budbreak. Control can also be achieved with the use
of fungicide sprays. Among the compounds registered for use in
Connecticut are captan, thiophanate-methyl,
chlorothalonil, and sulfur. Consult the label for dosage rates
and safety precautions. Adequate control can usually be achieved
with a general purpose tree fruit spray containing captan. For more
information, see the fact sheet on Disease Control for the Home
Cherry Orchard.
Black knot, Apiosporina morbosa.
This disease is a serious problem on both plum and cherry. On
cherry, it is generally more prevalent on sour cherries than on
sweet cherries. The disease gets its name from the conspicuous
black elongated galls on the twigs and branches. Spores from
these galls are washed onto the new twig growth early in the
season, causing new infections that may not be apparent until the
following year. The disease is not harmful to the tree until the
gall completely encircles the branch, with consequent girdling
and death of the branch beyond the gall.
The first line of defense is pruning out the affected wood, which
should be accomplished before budbreak. See Plum for a more detailed
discussion of this disease.
Powdery mildew.
This disease is generally not prevalent on cherry in
Connecticut and would rarely if ever warrant control. See Apple for a more detailed
discussion of this disease.
Insect Problems
Black cherry aphid, Myzus cerasi.
These aphids can injure cherry trees, particularly young
sweet cherry trees by causing leaf curling and growth
abnormalities. Severe infestations can stunt tree growth and
reduce fruit set in the year following an infestation. Also,
sooty mold grows on the aphid honeydew when it drops onto fruit
and leaves. When the cherry buds begin to open in spring, nymphs
hatch from the shiny black eggs that have overwintered on the
bark. The nymphs enter the buds and puncture the tissue to drink
fluids. The nymphs, like the adults, are black and shiny. The
aphid colonies are concentrated on the youngest leaves on
terminal shoots. Black cherry aphids develop through 2-3
generations on cherry, with a few winged adults produced by each
generation. By June, most aphids have migrated to summer hosts,
mainly plants in the mustard family. In autumn, the winged adults
return to cherry. After mating, the females lay their small eggs
on bark. These aphids may be controlled by spraying with
malathion, diazinon, or insecticidal soap, which are among the
compounds registered for use against this pest in Connecticut,
applied after the eggs have hatched and before the leaves have
curled. Consult the labels for dosage rates and safety
precautions. Dormant oil can also suffocate overwintering eggs.
Cankerworms, Alsophila pometaria and
Paleacrita vernata.
The measuring worms or inch-worms of these moths eat cherry
foliage during the spring. When the caterpillars are abundant,
they may defoliate the trees. In early spring, caterpillars hatch
from the eggs laid on the trees in late fall or early spring.
Older caterpillars are black or greenish with stripes. The male
moths are gray with a wingspread of 1"; the female moths are
wingless. Each species has only one generation a year. The
abundance of cankerworms varies in cycles. The caterpillars can
be controlled with one or more springtime applications of phosmet
or azadirachtin, which are among the compounds registered for
control of this pest in Connecticut. Consult the labels for
dosage rates and safety precautions.
Cherry maggots or fruit flies, Rhagoletis cingulata
and R. fausta.
These flies, in addition to the plum curculio, may cause
"wormy" cherries. The life cycles of both flies are
similar although the eastern cherry maggot, R. cingulata,
attacks both sweet and tart cherries, and the black cherry fruit
fly, R. fausta, attacks mainly tart cherries. Adults
emerge from pupae in the soil between late May and July. They
resemble adults of the apple maggot by having banded wings. Their
bodies are mostly black, with yellowish heads and legs. The adult
females feed on substances on leaf surfaces for about 10 days
before they begin to insert eggs into developing cherries with
their needle-like ovipositor. After they hatch, the maggots feed
for about 2 weeks while they tunnel through the fruit. Infested
cherries do not fall but hang on the tree, and the areas that
have or had maggots appear as sunken spots. After feeding,
maggots drop to the soil where they form pupae in the upper 2
inches. They remain in the ground until their emergence the
following spring. Cherry maggots can be controlled by applying
carbaryl or phosmet, which are among the compounds registered for
use against this pest in Connecticut, during the emergence period
of adults. Consult the labels for dosage rates and safety
precautions. The flies can be detected by hanging baited yellow
sticky traps in trees.
Eastern tent caterpillar, Malacosoma americanum.
The damage of these caterpillars varies from almost none to
complete defoliation of trees. In early spring, caterpillars
hatch from the eggs that have overwintered. The hairy
caterpillars build silken tents in which they hide except when
they are feeding on leaves. By late June, the caterpillars
mature, and soon the medium-sized moths are on the wing. Females
lay eggs in masses attached to twigs. Eastern tent caterpillars
have definite cycles of abundance, with a severe outbreaks every
7 or 8 years. Foliar sprays of carbaryl, phosmet, or
azadirachtin, which are among the compounds registered for use
against this pest in Connecticut, effectively control
caterpillars. Consult the labels for dosage rates and safety
precautions. Carbaryl, however, should not be used before or
during bloom because it is highly toxic to honey bees.
Fall webworm, Hyphantria cunea.
Webworms cause minor foliar damage on cherry trees.
Caterpillars build a loosely constructed tent on the ends of
infested branches. Tents, which usually are most abundant in the
northeastern part of the state, are visible in late summer.
Summer foliar sprays, such as carbaryl or phosmet, which are
among the compounds registered for control of this pest in
Connecticut, control this minor pest. Consult the labels for
dosage rates and safety precautions. See Pear for additional details of
the life history.
Pear sawfly or pear slug, Caliroa cerasi.
Sawflies damage the leaves especially on young trees. The
adults, who are small black, shiny, four-winged sawflies, emerge
from their cocoons in May. Females insert eggs into blisters in
the leaves. The green slug-like larvae eat the upper surfaces of
leaves, often skeletonizing them. After feeding, the larvae enter
the ground to form pupae. Adults emerge again in July and August,
and the females lay the eggs of a second generation. Pupae of the
second generation overwinter in cocoons. The slugs can be killed
with foliar applications of rotenone, which is among the
compounds registered for control of this pest in Connecticut.
Consult the labels for dosage rates and safety precautions.
Plum curculio, Conotrachelus nenuphar.
The adult plum curculio scars the fruit when they lay eggs,
and the feeding larvae often cause cherries to drop from the
tree. Adult curculios overwinter in debris in orchards and nearby
forests. The adults are dark brown snout beetles that are about
1/4" long. They have distinctive humps on the wing covers.
In spring, they become active about the time that the trees
blossom. Females feed on blossoms and young fruit. They start to
lay eggs soon after the shuck split and may continue this
activity for 2 months. They insert eggs in crescent-shaped areas
on the skin where they have fed. The grub-like larvae feed in the
fruit, often causing it to fall to the ground. The larvae enter
the soil to form their pupae. Emerged adults soon seek sheltered
areas in which to spend the winter. Plum curculios can be
controlled by applying phosmet, which is among the compounds
registered for use against this pest in Connecticut, at shuck
split and again about 10 days later. Consult the labels for
dosage rates and safety precautions.
San Jose scale, Quadraspidiotus perniciosus.
Large infestations of the San Jose scale can cause branch and
even tree death. Partially grown scales overwinter under their
circular gray covering or scale on the twigs and the branches of
trees. They begin to feed as the sap starts to flow. When apple
trees bloom, the males emerge from under their scales to mate
with the immobile females. Females are circular and cone-shaped,
and their circular scales are about 1/16" in diameter, with
a raised center or nipple. The males are smaller and elongate,
with the nipple not centered on the scale. Females give live
birth to tiny bright yellow crawlers in June, usually about 3-5
weeks after the flower petals drop. The young crawlers quickly
settle, insert their long mouthparts into the twigs, and then
suck sap from branches. As they grow, the crawlers secrete a waxy
filament that becomes their scale or covering. Scales apparently
have 2 generations per year, with the first in June and the
second in August. Scales may be controlled by applying a dormant
oil spray or by spraying phosmet after bloom to control crawlers.
Oil and phosmet are among the compounds registered for control of
this pest in Connecticut. Consult the labels for dosage rates and
safety precautions. To detect the yellow crawlers, wrap black
tape coated with Vaseline around small branches. Adult flights
may be detected with pheromone traps.
Uglynest caterpillar, Archips cerasivoranus.
These communal leafrollers are occasional foliar pests. In
spring, caterpillars hatch from eggs that were laid during the
previous year. The yellow larvae feed upon both wild and
cultivated cherry trees as they enclose the ends of branches in
large pointed webs or nests. The adult moths, which have
forewings that are yellow with brown and blue markings and about
1" from tip to tip, emerge in early summer. The females lay
flattened clusters of eggs on the bark of the branches and then
cover them with a glue-like material for protection. These
caterpillars easily may be controlled by pruning and then
destroying infested limbs.
[Plant Pest Handbook Home Page][Search Plant Pest Handbook]
[CAES Home][Contact Us][Directions & Locations][Search][Site Map]
Send Comments and Questions to Webmaster.
State of Connecticut Disclaimer and Privacy Policy.
Copyright 2006 The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station.