Fusicoccum quercus is a species of anamorphic fungus in the family Botryosphaeriaceae. It causes a bark canker that occurs on oak trees (Quercus). It is an aggressive, widespread bark parasite on saplings, young trees and on branches of older trees of many oaks. The symptoms are a 0.5–3 mm-long elliptic coloured spot that appears at the base of the branches, followed by necrosis that grows around the branch at this spot, causing the branch and shoots to die.

Fusicoccum quercus
Scientific classification
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F. quercus
Binomial name
Fusicoccum quercus
Oudem. (1894)[1]

The disease is only spread by big alpha or small beta conidia that grow from the phomopsis type (pycnidia) in the summer, and from the fusicoccum type winterhidings in September. It occurs mainly in dry (arid) habitats.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Oudemans CAJA. (1889). "Contributions à la flore mycologique des Pays-Bas. XIII" (in French). 5: 454–519 (see p. 495). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ Smith IM, Dunez J, Phillips DH, Lelliott RA, Archer SA (2009). European Handbook of Plant Diseases. John Wiley & Sons. p. 318. ISBN 978-1-4443-1418-2.
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