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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Grape
Measles (Esca)
Pathogen: Nine species of fungi in the genus Phaeoacremonium.
The perfect stage has been found for three: Togninia minima, T. californica, and T. fraxinopennsylvanica
(Reviewed 6/06,
updated 6/06)
In this Guideline:
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Affected leaves display small, chlorotic interveinal areas that enlarge and dry out. Foliage symptoms are frequently called
"esca." In red varieties dark red margins surround the dead
interveinal areas. Severely affected
leaves may drop and canes may dieback from the tips. Symptoms may occur at any time
during the growing season but are most prevalent during July and August. On
berries, small, round, dark
spots,
each bordered by a brown-purple ring, may occur. These spots may appear at any
time between fruit set and ripening. In severely affected vines the berries often crack and dry on the vine or
are subject to spoilage.
Measles are caused by several species of Togninia, a fungus
that produces perithecia on grapevines in old, rotted vascular tissue. Ascospores are released from fall and
winter into spring with rainfall; temperatures do not seem to be limiting for
spore release. Ascospores reinfect
the vine through pruning wounds.
Wounds remain susceptible up to 16 weeks after pruning with
susceptibilty declining over time.
The pathogen enters the current season's vascular tissue and it is
believed that symptoms are expressed in the same year that new infections
occur. Symptoms are caused by a toxin produced in the
vascular tissue and include both leaf striping and fruit spotting. Other
symptoms that appear in May are shoot tip dieback and tendril dieback.
Another species of fungus, Phaeomoniella chlamydospora, that causes the
disease is closely related to the species of Togninia listed above and
is also an endophyte in grapevine. This fungus overwinters
as pycnidia in 3-5 year-old pruning wounds and releases pycnidiospores with
rainfall from fall through spring.
The pathogen also infects the vine through current year pruning wounds
and produces symptoms.
With both pathogens,
there can occur a 50% reduction in shoot growth.
Measles is more prevalent in areas with consistently high summer temperatures,
such as the Central Valley, and in areas with heavy spring rainfall. Generally,
plantings that are 10 years of age or older are affected, although measles has
been seen on fruit and foliage on younger vines. Control can be achieved with use of liquid lime sulfur. However, it is important that the
product get into the cracks and crevices of the vine because that is where the
fungal fruiting bodies reside. Other
treatments include use of wax or tree tar to fill the holes on the vine. Though still experimental, there would
be no way for the fungus to reinfect the vine if these holes are plugged up.
| Common name |
Amount/Acre** |
| (trade name) |
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| When choosing a pesticide, consider information relating to environmental impact. |
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| A. |
THIOPHANATE-METHYL |
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(Topsin-M) WSB |
1% |
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MODE
OF ACTION: A MBC (Group 1)1 thiophanate fungicide. |
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COMMENTS: Restricted
entry interval: 7 days. Mix as a 1% paste and apply to cut or pruned surfaces immediately after cutting. Use allowed under a Special Local Needs label. |
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UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Grape
UC ANR Publication 3448
Diseases
W. D. Gubler, Plant
Pathology, UC Davis
R. J. Smith, UC Cooperative Extension, Sonoma Co.
L. G. Varela, UC IPM Program, Sonoma Co.
J. J. Stapleton, UC IPM Program, Kearney Agricultural Research Center,
Parlier
G. M. Leavitt, UC Cooperative Extension, Madera Co.
A. H. Purcell, Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley
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