Michael A. Ellis
Sooty blotch and fly speck are two different diseases. Both diseases are widespread throughout the Midwest, and commonly occur together on the same fruit. Sooty blotch and fly speck cause a discoloration or blemish of near-mature fruit. The discoloration is superficial, and while neither disease actually damages the fruit, the presence of disease reduces the grade and market value of the fruit. Although all apple varieties are susceptible to infection by both fungi, symptoms are most severe on yellow or light-colored varieties such as Golden Delicious or Grimes. Both diseases are most common during years with a cool, wet spring, rains in late summer and low temperatures in early fall.
Brown to dull black, sooty blotches with an indefinite
outline form on the fruit surface. Blotches may be l/4 inch in
diameter or larger. The blotches may coalesce to cover practically
the entire fruit. The sooty blotch fungus is restricted to the outer
surface of the fruit, and in many cases the blotches can be easily
rubbed off. However, if infection occurs early in the season, you may
need to rub or bleach the fruit vigorously to remove it.
Groups of 6 to 50 or more black and shiny round dots that resemble fly excreta appear on the surface of the fruit. The individual "fly specks" are clearly separated and can be easily distinguished from sooty blotch. Like sooty blotch, fly speck infections are superficial; however, they are usually harder to rub off than sooty blotch.
The fungus Gloeodes pomigena causes sooty blotch, and Zygophiala jamaicensis causes fly speck. Both fungi overwinter on twigs of various wild woody plants, especially wild blackberry and raspberry canes. Both fungi require free water on the fruit surface to infect.
The "sooty blotch" or "smudge" appearance on affected fruit results from the presence of hundreds of minute, dark fungal fruiting bodies (pycnidia) that are interconnected by a mass of loose, interwoven dark hyphae (fungal filaments). In spring, pycnidia on wild plants produce large numbers of spores (conidia) that ooze out and collect in a gelatinous mass. The conidia are then spread by water splash or wind blown mists into orchards from late May or early June until fall. The fungus first affects apple twigs, then secondary colonies are initiated on the fruit. Cool, humid weather (optimum 65 degrees F or 18 degrees C) is essential for disease development. The disease does not develop when temperatures reach 85 degrees F (30 degrees C). When May and June are cool and moist and are followed by a hot July and August, sooty blotch symptoms often do not appear for two to three months. The disease is absent or rare when hot, dry weather prevails until close to harvest time. The disease is most severe when cool, rainy weather in the spring is coupled with late summer rains and low temperatures in early fall. Under ideal conditions, the incubation period from the time the fungus reaches the fruit to the appearance of symptoms may be as short as five days. In the orchard, the incubation period usually lasts three to four weeks on fruits that are 42 to 45 days old.
The individual "fly specks" are sexual fruiting bodies (ascocarps) of the fungus. Starting in late spring, the fungus produces spores on wild hosts. These spores are carried by wind into the orchard. When spores come into contact with the fruit under the proper environmental conditions, they germinate and infect. Symptoms can develop within 15 days under favorable environmental conditions (65 degrees F or 18 degrees C).
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