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October 12, 2018 By Jo Ellen Meyers Sharp

State confirms boxwood blight

A dreaded, fast-killing fungus disease was discovered on boxwoods earlier this month in at least one big-box retailer in Indiana. Boxwood blight starts out as rounded dark brown spots on the leaves and then quickly, the evergreen shrub loses all of its leaves.

Boxwood blight spreads in Indiana.
Boxwood blight on holiday wreath. Photo courtesy Margery Daughtrey/Cornell

The shrubs were shipped from Oregon to 23 stores in Indiana in May, according to a news release from the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. They were also shipped to 11 other states. Many of the boxwoods (Buxus spp.) were sold to consumers and the variety ‘Graham Blandy’ seemed to be particularly affected.

Once a Purdue University lab confirmed the disease, DNR ordered the chain to remove all boxwoods from their shelves for disposal, and that the stores mitigate the area through disinfection to ensure that the pathogen is no longer present and able to infect further shipments of plants, the DNR report says.

Plant drops leaves

Consumers likely already know they have a problem with their boxwoods. “The plants were shipped in early spring, so plants that were infected at shipment would likely be defoliating now,” said Tom Creswell, director of Purdue University’s Plant and Pest Diagnostic Lab.

Boxwood blight spreads in Indiana
Boxwood blight causes leaves to fall. Photo courtesy Purdue Plant Pest Diagnostic Lab

This is a serious disease because the blight (Calonechtria pseudonaviculata) infests other members of the boxwood family, including the popular groundcover Japanese spurge (Pachysandra spp.). Another plant affected is sweetbox (Sarcococca spp.), which is not usually grown in central Indiana because the shrub  is not winter hardy here, but southern Indiana landscapes may have it.

This column first reported on this disease in 2012, when it was discovered in Ohio. The disease was first found in 2011 in Connecticut on boxwoods in a residential landscape. In the other states and Canada, the blight has been found on boxwoods at nurseries and growers.

Fast spreading disease

The alarms were sounded after researchers in Connecticut exposed healthy pachysandra plants to the spores of boxwood blight fungus. Within 10 days, the small round spots developed and within three weeks, the affected pachysandra leaves yellowed and dropped off. What that means is that besides being susceptible to infection, pachysandra will spread the disease. The disease is spread by spores by air or water. The disease also can be dormant and then erupt.

What to do

The natural inclination would be to treat the boxwoods and pachysandra with a fungicide, but that’s not recommended. “The outcome will be disappointing at best,” said Janna L. Beckerman, extension educator and plant pathologist. Fungicides are preventative, not curative. If your plants are infected, fungicide will not help.

Fungicide applications are only recommended when a known disease is present or you are spraying routinely to protect from a disease you know will show up every year, such as apple scab on apples or septoria leaf spot on tomato, Creswell said.

Resources

For more information, download Purdue’s “Boxwood Blight” publication. If you suspect your boxwoods have blight, send a sample to Purdue’s Plant Pest and Diagnostic Lab (http://bit.ly/2qEo6p2).

The state also has a web page devoted to this disease, and asks if you suspect one of your plants shows signs and symptoms of boxwood blight to call 866-663-9684.

Filed Under: Hoosier Gardener

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