• THE RAISED BARK AND D-SHAPED EXIT HOLES ARE INDICATORS OF THE BRONZE BIRCH BORER, A Tree killer

  • THE THIN CROWN AND YELLOW NEEDLES ON THIS HEMLOCK ARE A SIGN OF HEMLOCK WOOLY ADELGID And/OR ELONGATE HEMLOCK SCALE

  • THE WHITE COTTON BALLS ON THEse Hemlock NEEDLES ARE THE EGGS OF THE HEMLOCK WOOLY ADELGID

  • Caterpillar damage on these oak leaves create a swiss cheese effect

  • The winter moth caterpillar is one of many types of caterpillars that feed on deciduous trees.

  • ApPLE SCAB IS A COMMON FUNGUS on apple and crabapple. THIS TREE LOST ALL IT’S FOLIAGE BY JULY

  • THE NEW BUDS AND NEEDLES ON THIS AUSTRIAN PINE TREE HAVE BEEN DECIMATED BY A FUNGUS.

  • one spongy moth (formerly Gypsy moth) lays 600 – 800 eggs

  • TREES WITH FUNGAL GROWTH AT THEIR BASE should be investigated ASAP

  • THIS GANODERMA APPALANTUM OR "ARTIST CONCH" IS AN INDICATOR of internal decay

  • The cerrena unicolor fungi is an aggressive sap rot that can decay even large stems to the point of breakage.

  • PHYTOPTHORA CANKER IS A SERIOUS DISEASE THAT SHOULD BE MONITORED CLOSELY

  • The leathery, disgiured leaves on this copper beech are a sure sign of beech leaf disease, a deadly pathogen

Disease and Insect Disorders

Many disease and insect disorders are host specific. Proper diagnosis and an understanding of the pests’or pathogens’ life cycle are critical to prescribing treatment.