Wilt disease

[6] Oak wilt is a fungal caused by Bretziella fagacearum, is a disease originating in eastern Russia.This plug prevents the cambium vascular tissue from delivering nutrients and water to the rest of the plant, which eventually kills it.The nematodes can reproduce quickly in the sapwood under favorable conditions within susceptible pine species, causing wilting and death, sometimes in only a few weeks.[11] In the Midwest United States it has killed many Scots pines (Pinus sylvestris), and this attractive tree is no longer recommended for landscaping uses there.Many economically important plants are susceptible including cotton, tomatoes, potatoes, eggplants, peppers and ornamentals, as well as others in natural vegetation communities.The affected plant dies suddenly as a result of toxins produced by the fungus or by the choking of vascular tissues by the fungal structures.
A pine tree with pine wilt
diseasesplantsbacterianematodespine wiltPathogenscucurbitsErwinia tracheiphilaepidermisRalstonia solanacearumbananasplantainsSolanum tuberosumSolanum lycopersicumSolanum melongenaPelargoniumZingiber officinaleNicotiana tabacumCapsicumOlea europeaDutch elm diseasefungusOphiostoma ulmiMycoplasmaFusarium oxysporumBretziella fagacearumoak treeRed oakspersimmonsBursaphelenchus xylophilusindigenousPinus densifloraPinus thunbergiiMonochamusPinus sylvestrisStewart's wiltsweet cornVerticillium wiltspecieseudicotVerticilliumcottontomatoespotatoeseggplantspeppersChilliForest pathology