Dear Jim,
What a beautiful leaf disease!
Could it be Septotinia podophyllina, the only poplar leaf disease I know
where concentric rings occur? I was surprised that it is not mentioned
in the North American "bible" (Synclair & Lyon). The textbook of Butin
has a description and a drawing.
I found a link with a short description of the disease:
http://www.fao.org/docrep/004/AC492E/AC492E06.htm
I also found one reference: Kam, M. de, 1973: Life history, host range
an distribution of Septotinia podophyllinia. European Journal of Forest
Pathology 3: 1-6.
Please let us know what is is, as soon as you know!
Hope this helps.
All best,
Thomas Kirisits
____________________________________________________________
Dr. Thomas Kirisits
Institut für Forstentomologie, Forstpathologie und Forstschutz
Department für Wald- und Bodenwissenschaften
Universität für Bodenkultur (BOKU)
Hasenauerstraße 38
A-1190 Wien
Österreich
Tel.: (++43) (1) 368-24-33
Fax: (++43) (1) 368-24-33 oder (++43) (1) 368-63-52-97
e-mail: thomas.kirisits(a)boku.ac.at
Homepage:
http://ifff.boku.ac.at/
Institute of Forest Entomology, Forest Pathology and Forest Protection
Department for Forest and Soil Sciences
BOKU - University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences
Hasenauerstrasse 38
A-1190 Vienna
Austria
Tel.: (++43) (1) 368-24-33
Fax: (++43) (1) 368-24-33 or (++43) (1) 368-63-52-97
e-mail: thomas.kirisits(a)boku.ac.at
Homepage:
http://ifff.boku.ac.at/
>> James Worrall <jworrall(a)fs.fed.us>
07/13/08 3:17 PM >>>
We have a foliage disease of trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides) in
southwestern Colorado, USA. It is beautiful, strikingly unique, appears
to
be causing significant impact, and has me completely baffled. The
foresters who brought it to my attention are calling it "tiger blight"
because of the distinctive striping (see pictures below). It is
occurring
mostly on suckers and saplings and lower branches of overstory trees. I
was told that in one regenerating stand of suckers, it is killing 30-40%
of
the foliage.
There is no fruiting (perhaps very early initials), but there are
hyaline
hyphae in the lesions.
If the striping is caused by alternation between night and day (and I
can't
think what else would lead to the zonation), the lesions appear to
expand
rapidly.
I put some leaves in a moist chamber to see if anything fruits. In the
meantime, has anyone seen this disease before, or even similar symptoms
on
another species?
(See attached file: tiger_4.jpg)
(See attached file: tiger_5.jpg)
(See attached file: tiger_group_1.jpg)
Thanking you in advance,
Jim Worrall
US Forest Service
Rocky Mountain Region
Forest Health Management
216 N. Colorado St.
Gunnison CO, 81230
(970) 642-1166 desk
(970) 209-1332 cell
(970) 642-1919 fax