Chestnut Tree Blight Disease

American Chestnut Cooperators' Foundation Blight Fungus
Chestnut blight is caused by a fungus which entered our country on Asian nursery stock imported to New York around 1900. Spread by wind, rain, birds and other animals, it enters through cracks or woun
Chestnut Blight
Chestnut blight is caused by a fungus and is notorious for causing the American chestnut tree to become nearly extinct since it was discovered in the early 1900s. Arborists continue to work to restore
Chestnut Blight
Hosts American chestnut (Castanea dentata), whose native range is shown at left, is highly susceptible to the disease. European chestnut (C. sativa) is also quite susceptible. Chinese chestnut (C. mo
Chestnut Blight
Chestnut blight, a declared exotic disease under state legislation, has been confirmed on a number of properties in the Ovens Valley in Victoria’s north east. DPI has been working with affected gro
Chestnut Blight Fungus (Cryphonectria parasitica)
Phylum or Division: Ascomycota Class: Pyrenomycetes Order: Diaporthales Family: Valsaceae Identification: The fungus that attacks the American chestnut has the appearance of a large canker, and
Chestnut Blight, Dutch Elm Disease, and White Pine Blister Rust
These three forest diseases have historically been important. They have dramatically changed the way the present forest looks. All of them were introduced from other continents. Both the American ches
Chestnut Blight: The Classical Problem of an Introduced Pathogen
Chestnut Blight: The Classical Problem of an Introduced Pathogen, by Sandra L. Anagnostakis © 1987 Mycological Society of America. * Chestnut Blight: The Classical Problem of an Introduced
Revitalization of the Majestic Chestnut: Chestnut Blight Disease
Contributed by Sandra L. Anagnostakis Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station Box 1106 New Haven, CT 06504 Phone 203-974-8498 Sandra.Anagnostakis@po.state.ct.us Anagnostakis, S.L. 2000.
Three American Tragedies: Chestnut Blight, Butternut Canker, and Dutch Elm Disease
Scott E. Schlarbaum (1), Frederick Hebard (2), Pauline C. Spaine (3), and Joseph C. Kamalay (4) Abstract. Three North American tree species, American chestnut (Castanea dentata), butternut (Juglans