Don,
I just received a pint of propiconazole and will spray my trees as soon as the wind/rain/lightning stops, i'm not evac-ing for range fires (!), etc. I've been looking all over for a source for Pentra-Bark or Breakthru, by themselves, as i have the propiconazole in hand. In further reading about Sudden Oak Death, i note that Agri-Fos (correct spelling) plus Pentra-Bark is sold on eBay together, for about $250....quite a chunk of money to try it out to see if it works, considering that you found one of the fungicide trials ineffective. ("Agrifos", with no hyphen, appears to be an unrelated fertilizer company.)
To this end, i contacted Bill Stringfellow, a name you've possibly encountered if you've been reading about
Phytophthora diseases, because his contact number was listed on a
site that lists Pentra-Bark as a product. Pentra-Bark is made by
Agrichem, an Australian company, with which Mr. Stringfellow is closely aligned. He seems especially engaged in discussions about
Phytophthora ramorum, aka Sudden Oak Death. They use Agri-Fos and Pentra-Bark to treat that with some success. We discussed the possibility this is an outbreak of SOD in my area.
I expressed my doubts that this is
P. ramorum on three counts: the spore images i've seen online for
P. ramorum were
lemon-shaped, and i read them described as such, whereas these "white canker" sporangia are more like flattened spheres, wouldn't you say? Secondly, the infected bark on trees with
P. ramorum looks
weepy and has a higher width:length ratio than the dry, split, expanded bark on our trees. Thirdly,
root rot is a feature of
P. ramorum infection, at least in some trees, whereas my infected trees readily sprout from the root collars. Trees i've removed due to continual die-back seemed to have quite adequate root systems. I've actually uprooted dead-looking trees, seen a healthy-appearing root system, and stuck them in the ground at the edge of the property, where they've sprouted from the root collar. They don't look good but they are still throwing up shoots years later. Your Rose of Sharon rising from the dead comes to mind.
At any rate, Mr. Stringfellow is sending me some samples of Agri-Fos and Pentra Bark to try on these trees, in exchange for telling him about you, this site, and sending him the photos and PDF i prepared for our ag extension agent, to whom i took samples of tree bark, limb die-back, and wilting leaves two days ago.
I asked if mixing the propiconazole with Agri-Fos would decrease the chance of fungicide resistance developing, and he agreed it would. I've found a few sources online for fungicide resistance management, and here's the clearest table i've found so far from Purdue Extension (for pome fruits, but i'm
assuming the basis for mixing different classes of fungicides still holds):
www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/bp/bp-72-w.pdf If i find a better table later on, i'll share it.
We talked about application rates and timing. He suggested spring and fall bark drenches, rather than monthly. Are you treating monthly just because you got in the habit from foliar spraying monthly, or do you notice an uptick in symptoms one month post-drenching? Or maybe you haven't had enough time to decide yet? If semi-annual treatments would suffice, it would certainly be a more supportable spraying schedule, as well as decrease our use of chemicals, and lessen the strain on our mad-money budget!
It sounded like Mr. Stringfellow intends to contact you, and says this is timely as there is an industrial-strength tree-huggers meeting in Chicago soon, which he will attend. He also said that considerable money is being thrown at the research on
P. ramorum. I guess that's either an indication of the severity of the disease or alacrity of the fundraisers, lol. We can hope that this can either be folded into that knowledge base, or create another area of interest.
I so hope this disease gets the attention it ought to be receiving. More and more people are starting to note how many trees are dying, and it's not just due to harsh winters. I have Chinese Elm kicking the bucket now...a tree you could only kill previously by driving a stake through its heartwood. Another neighbor came over to discuss this a couple hours ago, after noting my hoophouse and thinking i might know things. ha ha ha...
Don, is there any way to attach files here? As you can see, i'm a hot-linking fool, and i'd also like to attach my PDF and pictures within my post to add to your public service on this issue.