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Red ring rot

Red ring rot - <em>Phellinus pini</em> fruiting bodies on pine
  • Latin name: Phellinus pini (Thore:Fr.) A. Ames
  • French name: Carie blanche alvéolaire
  • Division: Basidiomycota
  • Class: Aphyllophorales
  • Synonym(s): Fomes pini (Thore:Fr.) P. Karst.,
    Porodaedala pini (Thore:Fr.) Murrill,
    Trametes pini (Thore:Fr.) Fr.
Description

Micro-habitat(s)

Trunk

Distribution

Canada

Damage, symptoms and biology

The fungus causes red ring rot in the trunk of infected trees. The fungal fruiting bodies are hard, woody and perennial, that is, they remain on the tree season after season. The shape of the fruiting bodies is quite variable, ranging from hoof-shaped to bracket-like. Their upper surface may be a dark grayish colour to dark brown verging on black, often with some darker concentric circles parallel to the perimeter. The fruiting bodies release spores in cool, wet weather. The spores re-enter the tree through a dead branch stub. Wounds in the bark do not appear to be an important source of infection. Once the disease is well established, tiny spindle-shaped zones of white tissue appear; these are a distinctive characteristic of the disease.

Other information

The disease only kills infected trees when the infection is very severe and generalized.

Canadian Forest Service Publications

Red ring rot

Information on host(s)

Main host(s)

Amabilis fir, balsam fir, black spruce, eastern white pine, Engelmann spruce, grand fir, jack pine, mountain hemlock, Nootka false cypress, ponderosa pine, red pine, Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir, shore pine, Sitka spruce, subalpine fir, tamarack, western hemlock, western larch, western redcedar, western white pine, white spruce

Photos

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