Mummy Berry

(Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi)
Symptoms: Individual leaf and flower clusters turn brown and droop. A bluish-grey fuzz is visible on the petiole or flower stem. Infected berries become pink and puckered, then turn hard, white, and shrivelled and drop to the ground late in the season.
Disease cycle: This fungus over- winters in infected berries (mummy berries) that fell to the ground the previous season. Primary infection occurs when spores (ascospores) are released from the sprouting apothecia (fruiting structures of the pathogen) from mummy berries in early spring and blown onto new flower and leaf buds. Secondary infection occurs when bees carry the secondary spores (conidia) from primary infections to open blossoms.

Mummy Berry AphoteciaCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry AphoteciaCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry AphoteciaCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Fruit Infected LeafCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Leaf InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Leaf InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Leaf InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Leaf InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Flower InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Fruit InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Fruit InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Fruit InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult

Mummy Berry Fruit InfectionCarolyn Teasdale, ES Cropconsult