Pests and Diseases
Fruit diseases and pests are extremely common, making the use of chemical controls an important part of the production process. On this page, fruit growers will find information and tips on managing diseases, fruit bugs, and insect pests on crops such as apples, pears, grapes, and berries. Advice on using fungicides, antibiotics, insecticides, and miticides can be found, as well.
Common Fruit Diseases
Fruits crops, like all other plants, are susceptible to various diseases that can cause adverse changes and affect production. Scab, for example, is among the most common pear and apple diseases.
Apple scab is caused by a fungus and early infection signs can be spotted on the leaves, stem, or blossom end of the fruit. Lesions manifest in dull, olive green areas or spots. To prevent secondary infections, it’s critical to scout and control apple scab early in the season.
Pear scab has very similar symptoms and disease cycles. Unlike apple scab, however, pear scab frequently appears on twigs, where it can survive during winter and start new infections in spring.
Gray mold is another prevalent cause of disease in apples and pears. The primary infection points for the introduction of gray mold are fruit injuries and wounds. The disease can easily spread from infected to adjacent healthy fruit in storage.
Penn State Extension offers in-depth information on a number of fruit tree diseases, including strawberry leaf spots and leather rot, wooly apple aphid, and phytophthora root rot in raspberries. Resources on common stone fruit and plum tree diseases are also available.
Tree Fruit Insect Pests
Fruit pests can cause a significant decrease in yield. One of the more devastating fruit tree pests is the spotted lanternfly. It is an invasive insect that feeds on a wide range of plants. Penn State Extension provides growers with Spotted Lanternfly Management Resources, as well as permit training and best practices to stop its spread.
Other common fruit tree pests include American plum borer, dogwood borer, and oriental fruit moth. Additionally, tree fruits can be attacked by various species of plant and stink bugs.
Orchard Integrated Pest Management
Integrated Pest Management, or IPM, allows fruit producers to ensure proper pest management decisions that are economically, environmentally, and socially sound. IPM begins with collecting detailed information about a crop and its pest, also known as scouting.
Regular field scouting is key to conserving soil and reducing pesticide use. Along with scouting, implementing IPM insect monitoring can be a cost-effective way to detect the presence of pests in traps placed in orchards.
For further information on orchard IPM, access the Field Guide to Tree Fruit Disorders, Pests, and Beneficials. The publication – available in both English and Spanish – can be beneficial to orchard employees, who are often the first to detect a fruit disease or insect pest.
Fruit Fungicide and Pesticide Application
Fungi-caused infections are one of the most prevalent orchard diseases. They are often managed with either fungicidal or fungistatic pesticides. Fungicides are separated into two categories: protectants and systemics.
Protectant fungicides are designed to protect plants against infections at the application site. Systemics prevent diseases from developing on parts of the plant away from the application site. Discover more with Penn State Extension’s resources on fungicide resistance, proper usage and maintenance, and fungicide recommendations for apple diseases.
Fruit growers can find guidance and tools for spray products usage, such as the Spray Record-Keeping spreadsheet. Advice on apple insect and mite control is also available, as well as certification training for private pesticide application.
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ArticlesApple Disease - Southern Blight
Southern blight of apple was identified in Pennsylvania in 2018 and the causal organism has been tentatively identified as Sclerotium delphinii (formerly known as Sclerotium rolfsii var. delphinii). -
ArticlesApple and Pear Disease - Fire Blight, Dormant Removal of Cankers
When it comes to managing fire blight, the first line of defense is good sanitation, which is removing the overwintering source for the bacteria: cankers. -
ArticlesTree Fruit Insect Pest - Yellownecked Caterpillar
The yellownecked caterpillar is a key pest of shade trees. This insect is also destructive to the foliage of blueberry, apple, and other fruit trees. -
ArticlesBrown Marmorated Stink Bug
The brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB) was first collected in September of 1998 in Allentown, but probably arrived several years earlier. -
ArticlesTarnished Plant Bug
Plant bugs are a large, diverse family of insects that feed by sucking sap from plants, especially parts with high rates of cell division like buds and flowers. -
Tools and AppsOrchard Spray Record-Keeping
Use these spray record-keeping spreadsheets with an Integrated Pest Management plan. Talk to your Extension educator if you need help building them, or view the IPM videos and articles available here. -
VideosManejo Integrado de Plagas (MIP) en Huertos de Manzana
Length 9:46En este corto video, usted aprenderá principios básicos de exploración para enfermedades comunes en huertos – sarna o roña de la manzana - algunas plagas de ácaros y organismos benéficos. -
ArticlesOrchard IPM: Scouting with Your Smartphone
An important part of orchard scouting is to keep good records. A new mobile scouting spreadsheet, developed by Penn State, will help you keep track of what you are seeing in the field. -
ArticlesNematodes - Preventing Problems in Deciduous Fruit Trees
Nematodes reduce tree vigor and crop yields by parasitizing tree roots; they predispose trees to disease, reduce winter hardiness, and transmit viruses. -
ArticlesApple Diseases - Fruit Rots, Control at Apple Harvest (and Postharvest)
The fungi causing fruit rots can be quite stealthy since spores will land on the fruit and cause symptoms after the fruit have been in storage. -
ArticlesPlum Pox Virus - Replanting Stone Fruit in Sites Previously Affected by PPV
Lifting the PPV quarantine in Pennsylvania offered the opportunity for a "fresh start" and growers must plan carefully to get the most from their investment. -
ArticlesTree Fruit Disease - An Apple Scab Review
Early season apple disease management is primarily directed at controlling scab. -
ArticlesStone Fruit Disease - Bacterial Spot, Refining Disease Management
Bacterial spot, Xanthomonas arboricola pv. pruni, is a difficult disease to manage. -
ArticlesNematodes - The Unseen Enemy in Orchards
Nematodes undoubtedly are the most numerous multicellular animals in the world. You can pick up a handful of soil almost anywhere and extract nematodes from it. -
ArticlesPlum Pox Eradication in PA - A Blueprint for Future Plant Disease Outbreaks
In an increasingly global society, the transmission of viruses and various diseases has been facilitated through our own technologies. -
ArticlesApple Disease - Marssonina Blotch
Marssonina blotch, caused by Marssonina caronaria, is a foliar disease first identified in Pennsylvania in September 2017. -
ArticlesApple Disease - Apple Scab
Apple scab, Ventura inaequalis, is Pennsylvania's most important apple fungal disease, attacking wild and cultivated apple and crabapple. -
ArticlesPeach Disease - Anthracnose
Most years, anthracnose, caused by two Colletotrichum species, is considered a minor disease of peach. If left unchecked, this disease that attacks peach fruit can cause serious fruit rot infection. -
ArticlesPome Fruit Disease - Gray Mold
Gray mold, Botrytis cinerea, is the most important postharvest disease of pears and is second to blue mold in importance to apple. -
ArticlesStone Fruit Disease - Rhizopus Rot
Rhizopus rot, caused by Rhizopus nigricans, can be very destructive to harvested fruit. -
ArticlesPear Disease - Stony Pit
Stony pit of pear is presumed to be caused by a destructive virus, but the virus has not been isolated. Affected fruit are unsightly and unmarketable. -
ArticlesPear Insect and Mite Control Toolbox - Insecticide and Miticide Timing
Timing of a spray application in relation to insect and mite biology is important for achieving the best results. -
ArticlesTree Fruit Disease Toolbox - Fungicide Resistance Management
Resistance has sometimes resulted in pest-management-program failures. Below are presented tactics to help delay resistance to fungicides. -
ArticlesSpraying by the Numbers: Fungicide Resistance Management Tables for Tree Fruit Diseases
Tree fruit growers can prevent resistance to fungicides by alternating chemicals by FRAC group, also known as "spraying by the numbers." -
ArticlesPlum Disease - Plum Leaf Spot
Leaf spot of plums and prune-type plums is caused by the fungus Blumeriella jaapii (formerly Coccomyces prunophorae).



