Cedar Rust Diseases

Pathogen Type
Scientific Name
several
Hosts

Host vary by pathogens - for additional information on three juniper rust diseases that is compared to each other - see this chart

Symptoms

There are several rust diseases that attack junipers. Somejunipers are more resistant than others. Cedar Apple and Cedar Hawthorn rust tend to make a roundish brown gall on the branches. After the disease finishes sporalating (orange, jelly-like telia stage) in the spring, the twig may or may not die. Quince rust looks more like a roughened but slight swollen area in the twig. The quince rust fungus tends to sporalate multiple years from these infected areas before dying.

Controls include preventive sprays, growing resistant varieties and pruning out the galls before they sporulate. For additional information on these three rust diseases as well as a chart that compares these three rusts, check the fact sheets.

Cycle
See this chart for life cycles of the three juniper rust diseases
Management
Contact your local University Extension office or local garden center.
Credit

Written by James Schuster,retired Extension Specialist, Horticulture & Plant Pathology, and reviewed by Dr. Philip L. Nixon, Extension Specialist-Entomology, Department of Crop Sciences University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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242
Images
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Maturing rust gall on juniper.
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15510
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Apple rust (telial stage) on juniper.
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15513
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Cedar Apple Rust on Evergreen
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145305
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The cedar stage of cedar apple rust. Photographer Randa Rowland, Marion Extension Unit. Diagnosed by Dave Robson, Springfield Center
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97533
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Hawthorn rust on crabapple leaf and fruit
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31064