Diagnostics

Herbaceous Ornamentals

Alyssum (Lobularia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Aster (Aster)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Beard tongue (Penstemon)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Buttercup (Ranunculus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Butterfly weed (Asclepias)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Canna lily (Canna)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Chrysanthemum (Dendranthema)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Common periwinkle (Vinca)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Cornflower, Knapweed (Centaurea)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Cyclamen (Cyclamen)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Dahlia (Dahlia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Daisy (Argyranthemum)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Fuchsia (Fuchsia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Geranium (Pelargonium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Gerber daisy (Gerbera)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Gloxinia (Gloxinia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Groundsel, Cineraria (Senecio)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Hollyhock (Alcea)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Hyacinth (Hyacinth)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lantana (Lantana)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Larkspur (Delphinium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lobelia (Lobelia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.

Mallow (Malva)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Mint (Mentha)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Oregano (Origanum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Pansy (Viola)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Peony (Paeonia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Persian violet (Exacum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Pinks (Dianthus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Primrose (Primula (sometimes Polyanthus))

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Salvia, sage (Salvia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Spike (Dracaena)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Statice (Limonium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Stock (Matthiola)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Sunflower (Helianthus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Tulip (Tulipa)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Verbena (Verbena)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Woodrush (Luzula)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Herbaceous Ornamentals-Annuals

Begonia (Begonia)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Cockscomb (Celosia)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Coleus (Coleus)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Cosmos (Cosmos)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Flossflower (Ageratum)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Flowering tobacco (Nicotiana)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Fountain plant, Love-lies-bleeding (Amaranth)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Globe amaranth (Gomphrena)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Impatiens (Impatiens)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Marigold (Tagetes)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Morning glory (Ipomea)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Nasturtium (Tropaeolum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Ornamental pepper (Capsicum)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Petunia (Petunia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Pot marigold (Calendula)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Slipper flower (Calceolaria)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Snapdragon (Antirrhinum)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Strawflower (Helichrysum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Sweet pea (Lathyrus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Zinnia (Zinnia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Herbaceous Ornamentals-Perennials

Anemone (Anemone)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Avens (Geum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Balloon flower (Platycodon)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Barrenwort (Epimedium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Bee balm, Bergamot (Monarda)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Bellflower (Campanula)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Blackberry lily (Belamcanda)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Bleeding heart (Dicentra)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Bugleweed (Ajuga)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Candy tuft (Iberis)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Cat mint (Nepeta)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Catchfly, Maltese cross, Rose campion (Lychnis)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Columbine (Aquilegia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Common or Rose Mallow (Althaea)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Pythium species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.

Coneflower (Echinacea)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Coral bells, Alum root (Heuchera)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Cranesbill (Geranium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Daffodil (Narcissus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Daisy (Leucanthemum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Daylily (Hemerocallis)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Dead nettle (Lamium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Evening primrose (Oenothera)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

False spirea (Astilbe)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.

Feather reed grass (Calamagrostis)

  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.

Foamflower (Tiarella)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Fountain grass (Pennisetum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Fumitory (Corydalis)

  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.

Gayfeather (Liatris)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Globe thistle (Echinops)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Goblin flower (Gaillardia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Goldenrod (Solidago)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Hosta (Hosta)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Iris (Iris)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Jacob's ladder (Polemonium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lamb's ear, Betony (Stachys)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lenten rose (Hellebore)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Leopard plant (Ligularia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lily (Lilium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lily of the valley (Convallaria)

  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Lily turf (Liriope)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lungwort (Pulmonaria)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Lupine (Lupinus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Maiden grass, Eulalia (Miscanthus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Meadow rue (Thalictrum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Monkshood (Aconitum)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Obedient plant (Physostegia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Phlox (Phlox)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Pigsqueak (Bergenia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Poppy (Papaver)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Prickly pear cactus (Opuntia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Red hot poker (Kniphofia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Rock cress (Aubrieta)

  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.

Rose mallow (Hibiscus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Soapwort (Saponaria)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Solomon's seal (Polygonatum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Speedwell (Veronica)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Spurge (Euphorbia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

St. John's wort (Hypericum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Stokes' aster (Stokesia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Stonecrop (Sedum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Sweet Flag (Acorus)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.

Sweet woodruff (Galium)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Switchgrass (Panicum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Tansy, Feverfew (Tanacetum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Tickweed (Coreopsis)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Impatiens necrotic spot (Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV))
    Viruses can only be definitively diagnosed in a lab under high magnification or with various serological test kits. Symptoms can include necrotic streaks, spots, rings and lines on leaves and stems; vein necrosis; distorted flowers, stems and leaves; general stunting; and bud drop. Black, brown, reddish or yellowish concentric rings, although not always present, are also symptoms of viral infection. This virus is spread by thrips which feed on infected plants and spread the virus to healthy plants via their saliva.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Various ferns (Adiantum, Asplenium, Blechnum, Dryopteris, Gymnocarpium, Polystichum, etc.) (Ferns)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Wandflower (Gaura)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Wormwood (Artemisia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Yarrow (Achillea)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.

cinquefoil (Potentilla)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Woody Ornamentals

Rhododendron, Azalea (Rhododendron)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Russian sage (Perovskia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Sage (Salvia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Thyme (Thymus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Woody Ornamentals-Conifer

Arborvitae (Thuja)

  • Arborvitae leafminer (Argyresthia species)
    Mature larvae are approximately 6 mm long with greenish brown bodies and a black head. Adults are silvery gray moths.

Boxwood (Buxus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga)

  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.

Fir (Abies)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Balsam twig aphid (Mindarus abietus)
    Mature aphids are bluish gray and approximately 1.8 mm long
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Cytospora canker (Cytospora species)
    A stem and branch disorder affecting many different types of conifers. In Wisconsin, Colorado Blue Spruce is the main species that is affected.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Seasonal Needle Drop ()
    Evergreen needles naturally discolor and drop off after one or more years on the plant, and interior needles are affected. Seasonal needle drop may be gradual or all at once and can be mistaken for disease or insect damage. Each species tends to keep their needles for a specific period of time, varying slightly between trees and from year to year. Pinus strobus is the most dramatically affected. Third year needles turn yellow throughout the tree and will usually drop by winter. It may look as if yellowed needles outnumber green ones, but this is natural. P. nigra and P. sylvestris usually retain needles for three years and drop them in their fourth year. Thuja occidentalis usually turn brown rather than yellow and remain attached much longer than mature pine needles. Taxus spp. needles turn yellow and drop in late spring or early summer of their third year. Abies and Picea spp. yellow and drop with age, but because of their branch arrangement, it's often difficult to tell unless you part the branches to look at the interior.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Swiss needlecast (Phaeocryptopus gaeumannii)
    Infected needles of Douglas fir become discolored, turning a blotchy yellow-green or yellow, and then browning from the tips. Older needles are more severely affected than younger needles. Brown needles drop prematurely, leaving twigs with only the newest growth. Using a hand lens, small, black reproductive structures of the Swiss needlecast fungus can be seen in two diffuse bands on the undersurface of infected needles.
  • White pine weevil (Pissodes strobi)
    Adult weevils are 6 mm long with a long snout and oval body which is brown with brown and white spots on the back. There may also be some lateral die back due to larval feeding.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Hemlock (Tsuga)

  • Cytospora canker (Cytospora species)
    A stem and branch disorder affecting many different types of conifers. In Wisconsin, Colorado Blue Spruce is the main species that is affected.

Juniper (Juniperus)

Pine (Pinus)

  • Cytospora canker (Cytospora species)
    A stem and branch disorder affecting many different types of conifers. In Wisconsin, Colorado Blue Spruce is the main species that is affected.
  • Diplodia shoot blight & canker (Diplodia pinea)
    A shoot tip disorder that can affect a number of pine species.
  • Eastern pine shoot borer (Eucosoma gloriola)
    Larvae up to 13 mm in length are off white to gray with yellowish brown heads. Adults have a copper red color with two gray bands on the forewings.
  • European pine sawfly (Neodiprion sertifer)
    Larvae are gray green with black heads and legs. They have a light green stripe down the back and two light green and one dark green to black stripe on each side. Larvae are 18 - 25 mm long when mature.
  • Lophodermium needlecast (Lophodermium)
    Similar to Brown Spot. First appears as bar like gray-black spots turning brown with yellow margins before they are detected. Later the entire needle turns yellow, then brown and may fall off. Older trees show most infection at ground level, with the disease progressing upward. Older needles on the branch are most likely to show symptoms. Damage is most often noticed in the Spring.
  • Pine needle miner (Zelleria haimbachi)
    Adult female scales are white, teardrop shaped and 2.5 - 3 mm long.
  • Pine needle scale (Chionaspis pinifoliae)
    Crawlers are amber colored. Adult scale is gray to black.
  • White pine weevil (Pissodes strobi)
    Adult weevils are 6 mm long with a long snout and oval body which is brown with brown and white spots on the back. There may also be some lateral die back due to larval feeding.

Spruce (Picea)

  • Cytospora canker (Cytospora species)
    A stem and branch disorder affecting many different types of conifers. In Wisconsin, Colorado Blue Spruce is the main species that is affected.
  • Rhizosphaera needlecast (Rhizosphaera kalkhoffii)
    The first noticeable sign of Rhizosphaera needlecast is a loss of the inner-most needles on the lower branches of spruce trees. Often the youngest needles remain healthy. If your tree has this pattern of needle loss, use a 10X hand lens to observe the shed needles. If Rhizosphaera needlecast is the problem, you should be able to see rows of small black dots erupting through the surface of the needle. These black dots are fruiting bodies of the fungus that causes the disease and are diagnostic.
  • Spruce needle miner (Endothenia albolineana)
    Larvae are light greenish brown caterpillars with a dark head and about 10 mm in length.
  • White pine weevil (Pissodes strobi)
    Adult weevils are 6 mm long with a long snout and oval body which is brown with brown and white spots on the back. There may also be some lateral die back due to larval feeding.

Woody Ornamentals-Deciduous-Shrub

Barberry (Berberis)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Blue mist spirea (Caryopteris)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Butterfly bush (Buddleia)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Cotoneaster (Cotoneaster)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Pine needle scale (Chionaspis pinifoliae)
    Crawlers are amber colored. Adult scale is gray to black.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.

Daphne (Daphne)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Dogwood (Cornus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.

Euonymus (Euonymus)

  • Euonymus caterpillar (Yponomeuta cagnagella)
    Larvae are light greenish yellow in color with two sets of black spots on each body segment. Fully grown larvae reach 20mm in length.

Forsythia (Forsythia)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Heath (Erica)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Honeysuckle (Lonicera)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Lilac (Syringa)

  • Ash Yellows/Lilac Witches Broom (Candidatus Phytoplasma faxini)
    Ash yellows is a chronic, systemic disease of ash trees caused by a bacteria-like organism (Phytoplasma). The organism that causes ash yellows also causes a disease called lilac witches’-broom. The ash yellows phytoplasma is thought to be spread primarily through the feeding activity of leafhopper insects.
  • Ash-Lilac Borer (Clearwing Moth) (Podosesia syringae)
    Larvae are creamy white grubs with small dark heads and small prolegs on the abdomen with hook-like crochets at the tip.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Privet (Ligustrum)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Privet (Ligustrum)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Quince (Chaenomeles)

  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Rhododendron (Rhododendron)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Rose (Rosa)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Rose of Sharon (Hibiscus)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Shrubby cinquefoil (Potentilla)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

Smoketree (Cotinus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Spiraea (Spiraea)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Sumac (Rhus)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Viburnum (Viburnum)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Weigela (Weigela)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Woody Ornamentals-Deciduous-Tree

Ash (Fraxinus)

  • Ash Yellows/Lilac Witches Broom (Candidatus Phytoplasma faxini)
    Ash yellows is a chronic, systemic disease of ash trees caused by a bacteria-like organism (Phytoplasma). The organism that causes ash yellows also causes a disease called lilac witches’-broom. The ash yellows phytoplasma is thought to be spread primarily through the feeding activity of leafhopper insects.
  • Ash plantbug (Tropidosteptes amoenus)
    Yellow or brown to black in color with yellow to pink markings with a length of 5-6 mm.
  • Ash-Lilac Borer (Clearwing Moth) (Podosesia syringae)
    Larvae are creamy white grubs with small dark heads and small prolegs on the abdomen with hook-like crochets at the tip.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Birch (Betula)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
    Larvae hatch at 3 mm long and black in color. Larvae will grow up to 50 mm in length with 5 pairs of blue spots toward the front and 6 pairs of red spots toward the rear of the caterpillar. Adults are moths.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Buckeye (Aesculus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Pythium species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Thielaviopsis species (W))
    Uncommonly damages woody plants in the landscape. Symptoms include stunting, sparse foliage, poor foliar color and die back after the death of fibrous roots
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Catalpa (Catalpa)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Thielaviopsis species (W))
    Uncommonly damages woody plants in the landscape. Symptoms include stunting, sparse foliage, poor foliar color and die back after the death of fibrous roots
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Coffeetree (Gymnocladus)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Crabapple (Malus)

  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Elm (Ulmus)

  • Dutch elm disease (Ophiostoma novo-ulmi)
    Wilting leaves, often on a single branch, are the first symptoms of Dutch elm disease. Yellowing of leaves and leaf drop follow. Trees may quickly lose all of their leaves, or trees may survive several years with an infection localized in a single branch. Infected branches often have brown streaks under the bark that follow the wood grain.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Filbert (Corylus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Hackberry (Celtis)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Eriophyid mite (Eriophyes species)
    Adults are elongated and have two sets of anterior legs. Most species are less than 1 mm long and difficult to identify without a microscope. Color is variable but most are white to yellow.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Hackberry nipple gall (Pachypsylla celtidismamma)
    Adults are psylliads that resemble miniature cicadas. Mottled light brown in color, 4-5 mm long with wings that peak over the back.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.

Hawthorn (Crataegus)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Cytospora canker (Cytospora species)
    A stem and branch disorder affecting many different types of conifers. In Wisconsin, Colorado Blue Spruce is the main species that is affected.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
    Larvae hatch at 3 mm long and black in color. Larvae will grow up to 50 mm in length with 5 pairs of blue spots toward the front and 6 pairs of red spots toward the rear of the caterpillar. Adults are moths.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Hickory (Carya)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
    Larvae hatch at 3 mm long and black in color. Larvae will grow up to 50 mm in length with 5 pairs of blue spots toward the front and 6 pairs of red spots toward the rear of the caterpillar. Adults are moths.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Honeylocust (Gleditsia )

  • Nectria canker (Nectria (Neonectria))
    Nectria canker is characterized by the production of sore-like wounds (cankers) that form on twigs, branches, and trunks. Cankers can form at leaf scars and wherever injuries occur. Injuries can be caused by pruning (particularly improper pruning), frost, hail, cracking from heavy snow or ice, sunscald, insects, or mammals. Cankers appear first as slightly sunken areas on the bark, but can grow for years, becoming target-shaped or elongated. Small branches girdled by cankers can wilt suddenly, fail to leaf out, and die.

Linden (Tilia)

  • Linden borer (Saperda vestia)
    Primary color is olive green to yellow brown because of hairs covering the dark colored body. Most have dark spots on each wing cover, two above the middle of the wing and one below.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.

Locust (Robinia)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Magnolia (Magnolia)

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Maple (Acer)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Eriophyid mite (Eriophyes species)
    Adults are elongated and have two sets of anterior legs. Most species are less than 1 mm long and difficult to identify without a microscope. Color is variable but most are white to yellow.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
    Larvae hatch at 3 mm long and black in color. Larvae will grow up to 50 mm in length with 5 pairs of blue spots toward the front and 6 pairs of red spots toward the rear of the caterpillar. Adults are moths.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Pythium species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Thielaviopsis species (W))
    Uncommonly damages woody plants in the landscape. Symptoms include stunting, sparse foliage, poor foliar color and die back after the death of fibrous roots
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Oak (Quercus)

  • Oak leafminer (Cameraria species)
    Several species cause mines in oak leaves.
  • Oak wilt (Ceratocystis fagacearum)
    Initially, single branches on infected trees wilt and die. Leaves on these branches often bronze, or turn tan or dull green, starting at the tips or outer margins. Leaves may also droop, curl, or fall from the tree. Infected trees eventually die. Oak wilt can kill oaks in the red oak group in less than one month. Oaks in the white oak group usually have less severe symptoms and are rarely killed in one season.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Plum / Cherry (Prunus)

  • Black knot (Apiosporina morbosa)
    During the first year of infection, black knot-infected trees develop greenish-brown to brown swellings on affected branches and trunks. During the second year, these swellings enlarge into the ugly, black, erupting tumors (galls) characteristic of the disease. Older gall tissue (greater than two years old) often dies and then is colonized by fungi that give the gall a whitish or pinkish color. Severe black knot infections may cause general tree decline or death if galls girdle large limbs or tree trunks.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Redbud (Cercis)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Birch canker (Nectria (Neonectria) galligena)
    Canker lesions first appear as small dark depressed areas on young, smooth barked stems, often killing twigs by girdling. Most cankers are centered on small branch stubs or their remains. Diseased trees usually have more than one canker. This disease is among the most important stem diseases on birch.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Cylindrocladium species)
    Root infections are characterized by many dark brown to black lesions often with longitudinal cracks. Severe root disease leads to stunting, wilting, yellowing and death. Stem infections of both conifers and broadleaves arise at the leaf bases and may girdle small stems. Diseased conifer needles turn yellow or red-brown. Dark lesions form in the leaves of broadleaf plants. Leaf blight leads to defoliation.
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.

Russian Olive (Elaeagnus )

  • Phomopsis canker (Phomopsis species)
    Kills seedlings/saplings and causes cankers on larger plants. Shriveled, faded foliage can be found on dead branches and small trees from midsummer to fall. Young cankers in smooth-barked branches are reddish-brown to black. An amber-brown gum is often exuded from lesions. Cankers on trunks and scaffold limbs appear as dark, depressed areas leading to splits in the bark. Within a month after infection, pimply eruptions appear on the surface. Initially grayish-tan, eruptions darken with age and eventually turn black. Usually they are abundant by the time the disease is detected but remain prominent for at least a year.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Serviceberry (Amelanchier)

  • Armillaria root rot (Armillaria species)
    Also known as shoestring root rot, this is an often lethal disease of woody plant roots and lower stems. It can affect almost any conifer or hardwood species, from seedling to maturity. Trees and shrubs stressed due to drought or defoliation are more susceptible. The fungi produce tough, cord-like strands called “rhizomorphs” that grow from decaying stumps and roots through the soil. Infection of other trees or shrubs can result from penetration of intact roots by rhizomorphs. In late summer or early fall, honey-colored mushrooms of Armillaria fungi develop near the bases of colonized plants and produce spores that are distributed by wind. Infection also can occur after these spores germinate in wounds on stems or roots. Above-ground symptoms include slow growth, yellowing and dwarfing of foliage, and thin crowns. Dieback of twigs and branches also may occur. Symptoms may develop slowly and intensify over many years or kill their host rapidly. Bark on lower stems or roots may be killed and crack, with flow of resin common on conifers. Thin white mats of fungus tissue called “mycelial fans” may be present within and beneath killed bark. Stem and root wood decayed by Armillaria fungi is often water-soaked, creamy to yellow in color, and spongy or stringy in texture. Rhizomorphs are commonly seen on or beneath the bark and growing from decayed stumps and roots.
  • Armored scale (Diaspididae family)
    Armored scales are oval, somewhat elongate (think oyster shell), small (1/20-1/8") insects that secrete a hard, waxy cover. During the adult stage, no body parts are visible except the cover. Eggs are laid under the cover and hatch into crawlers, which can move around and are susceptible to sprays and oils.
  • Cold/Frost Damage ()
    Any part of a plant may be affected by cold damage. In spring, it's usually tender growth, which will appear watersoaked and may turn black. Flower buds can sustain damage during winter dormancy or during the blooming period. Plants will either have reduced numbers of blooms, and hence fruit set, or won't bloom at all. In fall, if plants aren't hardened off, they can sustain cold injury in temperatures well above those tolerated by acclimated plants. Root injury is rare unless plants are in raised beds or containers. Generally younger plants are more susceptible than mature plants. Cold injury on woody plants usually presents in the form of frost cracks in wood or bark. Mature leaves may turn red, purple, brown or black and may or may not fall off the tree or shrub.
  • Gas Injury ()
    Symptoms of gas injury can range from slow growth to total plant death, and initially resemble symptoms of water stress. Gas injury may also be mistaken for compacted soil, root disease, herbicide injury or air pollution. Symptoms include: slow growth, small leaves, wilt and leaf drop. Roots may be bluish and water-soaked, and surrounding soils may turn bluish gray or black. The injury may progress over time. Gas injury may occur from gas released into the soil or into the air. Root zone injury from gas leaks in soil usually stems from gas or sewer-line breaks (rapid damage) or gases leaking from landfills (gradual damage). The extent of damage depends on the size of the leak, when it occurs (summer is worse), soil type (heavier is worse) and the amount of paving surrounding the plants. Gas injury due to atmospheric gas leaks usually stems from vents, chimneys, smokestacks or industrial equipment, and may or may not be phytotoxic. These releases are usually accidental and short-lived.
  • Girdling ()
    Decline and dieback caused by girdling, either by roots or man-made objects, usually affect mature trees moreso than young ones. Symptoms may include: thinning crown, leaf scorch, sparse foliage, leaves in tufts, branch dieback, early fall color, and leaf drop.
  • Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
    Larvae hatch at 3 mm long and black in color. Larvae will grow up to 50 mm in length with 5 pairs of blue spots toward the front and 6 pairs of red spots toward the rear of the caterpillar. Adults are moths.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Manganese deficiency - woody plants ()
    Manganese (Mn) deficiency is most likely to occur in neutral to high pH soils that are also high in organic matter. This is common in the red soils of eastern Wisconsin, especially in low-lying, poorly drained areas, and on burned-over organic soils. Symptoms of Mn deficiency in broadleaf trees/shrubs manifest as interveinal chlorosis sometimes worsening to necrosis, undersized leaves, or leaves with curly, wavy or crinkled leaf margins. Symptoms appear on new growth first. Acer rubrum is particularly susceptible to this condition. In conifers, Mn deficiency symptoms closely resemble those of iron (Fe) deficiency: chlorotic and stunted new growth, with the older growth remaining green. Symptoms are more likely to appear on drought-stressed or acid-loving plants.
  • Mealybug (Pseudococcidae family)
    Characteristically mealybugs are covered in white granular or cotton-like wax. Mealy bug bodies are always soft and the females are oval and flat with distinct segmentation often visible in the wax. Eggs are usually laid in a white cottony material underneath the female. Widespread in greenhouses and indoor plants; not an outdoor problem. Depending on temperature, one generation can develop every 1-3 months.
  • Planting Too Deeply ()
    Trees planted too deeply in the soil exhibit a gradual decline in their growth and development. Deep planting acts as a primary stress factor and can lead to stem girdling roots which will eventually choke the trunk. It can also make trees more susceptible to disease and insect pests, and frost cracks; can cause roots to grow up toward the surface where they will have to compete for nutrients and water; and can activate suckering shoots or adventitious roots that grow from the underground part of the trunk. If you cannot see the root flare of your woody plant, then it is planted too deeply.
  • Root rot (Fusarium species (W))
    Symptoms include stunting, chlorosis, root necrosis and death of woody plants. Symptoms are dependent on cultural practices and the local environment.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Pythium species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Thielaviopsis species (W))
    Uncommonly damages woody plants in the landscape. Symptoms include stunting, sparse foliage, poor foliar color and die back after the death of fibrous roots
  • Scorch ()
    The primary symptom of scorch is the browning of leaf edges or needles. Sometimes there will be a distinct yellow band between the leaf edges and the green inner leaf. On conifers, especially spruce, affected needles will turn reddish-purple then brown. Scorch itself is a symptom and not the root cause of the problem. Woody species often affected by scorch include: Acer, Abies, Fraxinus, Pinus, Quercus and Tilia. Scorch may not affect the whole plant uniformly. It is not generally fatal. However, if extensive damage is present by mid-summer, the plant's ability to make food will be reduced and it may be more susceptible to winter damage. Scorch usually results from the following: insufficient water (due to drought, improper siting, impaired root systems); a response to an undesirable soil or air constituent (salt accumulation or atmospheric chemicals); or a response to fungal or bacteria pathogens.
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Spider mites (Tetranychidae family)
    Family includes the majority of mites that cause plant damage. Larvae are smaller with 6 legs with adults being larger and having 8 legs. Spider mites vary in color and size by species with many being microscopic.
  • Sunscald ()
    Often the first symptom of sunscald is the reddish-brown discoloration of bark. Then, the bark shrinks, appearing sunken, splits and peels back in chunky patches exposing sapwood underneath. Often cankers develop. Severe sunscald may cause the entire trunk to be girdled, or only individual branches. Look for sunscald on the south, southwest or west side of trunks or branches. It most commonly affects trees suffering from water stress or young trees with thin bark. Newly planted or transplanted are most susceptible and container-grown plants are more likely to get sunscald than field-grown ones. Species particularly prone to sunscald include: Liriodendron, Acer, Tilia, Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, Juglans, and Ulmus.
  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Tuliptree (Liriodendron )

  • Verticillium wilt (woody plants) (Verticillium species (W))
    The first signs of Verticillium wilt that you may notice are individual branches that suddenly wilt and die. Affected branches may occur on one side of the tree or may be scattered throughout the tree. If you carefully peel away the bark of these branches, you may see brown or green streaking in the sapwood. Streaking is common in trees such as maple or redbud, but often is not visible in ash.

Walnut (Juglans)

  • White-marked tussock moth (Orygia leucostigma)
    Larvae are up to 31 mm long with a reddish orange head and a cream colored body with distinct whitish yellow tufted hairs on the front and hind ends. Adults are moths.
  • Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra)
    Mature larvae are black except for a yellow orange neck and several yellow lines along the length of the body.

Woody Ornamentals-Vines

Clematis (Clematis)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.
  • Herbicide Damage ()
    Herbicides can damage any type of plant and injury usually happens as a result of drift, careless application or evaporation during hot weather. Symptoms of herbicide injury may include: twisted plant stems; stem fasciation; narrow, curling or leathery leaves; or excessive callus formation on roots and stems along with secondary root growth. At extremely low application rates, broadleaf herbicides such as 2,4-D, MCPP or dicamba usually will not kill plants, although they will act as growth regulators.
  • Overwatering ()
    Overwatering, whether acute or chronic, is usually a death sentence for plants, especially when accompanied with poor drainage. Waterlogged soils limit oxygen uptake by plant roots, which in turn affects the plant's metabolism, nutrient uptake, water absorption and photosynthesis. Symptoms vary from slow growth to plant death and can include: leaf necrosis, dieback, root discoloration, soil blackening, foul odors, slow growth, thinning canopy and chlorosis. Overwatered conifer symptoms are similar, except they can also exhibit needle drop. Overwatering is common in irrigated landscapes, plantings at the bottoms of slopes and in poorly drained containers.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Phytophthora species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggestareardenersadners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Pythium species (W))
    Gardeners often become aware of root rot problems when they see above ground symptoms of the disease. Plants with root rot are often stunted or wilted, and may have leaves with a yellow or red color, suggesting a nutrient deficiency. Examination of the roots of these plants reveals tissue that is soft and brown.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Rhizoctonia species (W))
    Symptoms on the above ground parts of larger plants include necrotic spots and blotches on the leaves, shoot blight and dieback.
  • Root rot (woody plants) (Thielaviopsis species (W))
    Uncommonly damages woody plants in the landscape. Symptoms include stunting, sparse foliage, poor foliar color and die back after the death of fibrous roots
  • Soft scale (Coccidae family)
    Soft scales are usually broadly oval becoming larger and more humped as eggs mature underneath the protective cover. Look for adults on twigs or small branches and immature stages on leaves or needles.
  • Soil Compaction ()
    Soil compaction is usually one of several factors that can lead to the decline of woody plants. It is a physical factor, much like drought, freezing or mechanical damage. When combined with chemical factors such as salinity, nutrient imbalances, soil acidification, herbicides or pollution and biotic factors, such as disease or insect problems, the tree will often go into slow decline. Remove any one of these factors before the plant dies or is beyond help, and the decline can be arrested and the plant may recover. Symptoms of soil compaction vary with tree species and cause, but they can include: slow growth; small, distorted, sparse, chlorotic and nutrient-deficient leaves; scorch; premature autumn color; premature leaf drop; abnormally large "distress" crops of fruit; insufficient storage of food reserves for winter; and dieback of twigs or branches. The three factors that lead to soil compaction are gravity, rain and traffic.
  • Sooty molds (Several)
    Sooty molds are dark fungi that grow on plant surfaces covered in honeydew excreted by insects with piercing/sucking mouth parts such as aphids, scale, mealybugs and whiteflies. It is generally harmless to plants, except when it is prolific, preventing light from reaching leaf surfaces, causing plants stress. This stress may make the plant more susceptible to other diseases or problems.
  • Winter salt injury ()
    De-icing salts accumulate in the soil along streets/sidewalks or may be dispersed in an aerosol spray by fast-moving traffic and high winds along wet, salted roads. Salt spray can travel hundreds of feet from the roads where it originated. Symptoms can be similar to other abiotic plant problems, but there are tell-tale indicators including: Damage is more severe on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks; severity of damage increases with volume/speed of traffic and amount of salt used; plants downwind from roads show more damage than those upwind; most damage occurs within 60' of road and decreases with distance; branches covered by snow or otherwise sheltered show no damage; branches growing above spray drift zone show no damage. Symptoms in deciduous plants include: delayed budbreak; reduced leaf size/stem growth; off-colored foliage; scorched leaves; no flowering; bud/twig death; and branch-tip dieback leading to 'witches' broom' growth below the dead area. Symptoms on conifers include: tips of mature needles turn brown or yellow, discoloration moves down needle eventually killing all of it, then needles fall off; twig dieback; and symptoms manifest only on sides of plants facing roads/sidewalks.

Pachysandra (Pachysandra)

  • Common aphids (Several)
    Numerous species with colors ranging from yellow to red to black with short oval bodies. Aphids are small but vary in size.

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