Abstract

A survey of 14 nurseries growing hybrid rhododendron, Pieris spp., or Viburnum spp. was conducted as part of the 2003 Sudden Oak Death Pilot National Survey to determine if Phytophthora ramorum, the causal agent of sudden oak death, had been introduced to nurseries in North Carolina. Over 220,000 hybrid rhododendrons, 1,700 plants of Pieris spp., and 2,800 plants of Viburnum spp. were surveyed. Across nurseries, blight and dieback incidence averaged 2.4% for Pieris spp. and 10% for rhododendron. P. ramorum was not recovered by isolation or detected by polymerase chain reaction in the 347 plant samples collected. Three species of Phytophthora were isolated from hybrid rhododendron and Pieris spp., but no Phytophthora isolates were recovered from Viburnum spp. P. citricola and P. cambivora were isolated most frequently (61 and 39 isolates, respectively), while 2 isolates of P. cactorum were recovered. Occasionally, two Phytophthora spp. were found in the same block of rhododendrons within a nursery, but only one species was recovered from an individual plant. Most cultivars of rhododendron surveyed, including 'English Roseum,' 'Nova Zembla,' and 'Roseum Elegans,' had less than 0.5% incidence of Phytophthora blight and dieback, whereas 'Lee's Dark Purple' had 3.8% disease incidence across all nurseries surveyed.

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