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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ArticlesStrawberry Disease - Verticillium Wilt
Verticillium wilt of strawberry, caused by the soilborne fungus Verticillium albo-atrum, infects more than 300 kinds of cultivated plants. -
ArticlesStrawberry Disease - Gray Mold
Gray mold, or botrytis blight, Botrytis cinerea, causes a greater loss of strawberry flowers and fruit than any other disease. It is found on green as well as ripening and harvested fruit. -
ArticlesSmall Fruit Mite - Broad Mites on Blackberries
Broad mites (Polyphagotarsonemus latus) have become a problem in blackberry plantings. -
ArticlesRaspberry Disease - Phytophthora Root Rot
Phytophthora root rot can kill bramble plants in areas where the soil remains wet for long periods. -
ArticlesGrape Disease - Downy Mildew
Downy mildew, Plasmopara viticola, can infect berries, leaves, and young shoots. It occurs wherever it is wet and warm during the growing season. -
ArticlesFruit IPM - Spotted Wing Drosophila Fruit Monitoring
Spotted wing drosophila (SWD), Drosophila suzukii, continues to be a problem for growers of soft-skinned fruit such as blackberry, blueberry, cherry (sweet and tart), and raspberry (black and red). -
ArticlesGrape Disease - Black Rot
Black rot, Guignardia bidwelli, is one of the most serious diseases of grapes in the eastern United States. -
ArticlesBramble Disease - Managing Orange Rust
Orange rust is a common systemic disease that infects black raspberries and blackberries, but not red raspberries. Symptoms are more severe in wet years. -
ArticlesBramble Disease - Verticillium Wilt
Verticillium wilt is caused by two common soilborne fungi (Verticillium dahliae and Verticillium albo-atrum) that have a wide host range and attack more than 300 woody and herbaceous plants. -
ArticlesStrawberry Disease - Black Root Rot
Black root rot is known as a "disease complex," meaning that it can be caused by several factors. -
ArticlesStrawberry Disease - Anthracnose
Anthracnose, caused by species in the genus Colletotrichum, can manifest as a fruit rot, crown rot, and/or leaf spots, as well as lesions on petioles and runner stolons. -
ArticlesBlueberry Disease - Powdery Mildew, Not Symptoms You'd Expect
Powdery mildew, a warm-weather high-humidity disease, is present in some blueberry plantings. Lowbush, highbush, and rabbiteye blueberries are all affected. -
ArticlesBlueberry Disease - Mummy Berry
Mummy berry, Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi, is the most serious and widespread disease of highbush, lowbush, and rabbiteye blueberries. It is most serious following moist, spring weather conditions. -
ArticlesBlueberry Disease - Botrytis Blight and Fruit Rot
Botrytis blight and fruit rot of blueberry, caused by Botrytis cinerea, are common occurrences, especially in cool, humid weather on many crops throughout the world. -
ArticlesAnthracnose on Strawberry Fruit
Anthracnose on strawberries has become increasingly problematic in the Mid-Atlantic region. -
ArticlesPlum Pox Virus Success Story
The successful eradication of PPV could not have been achieved without the cooperation of fruit growers, PDA, USDA/APHIS, USDA/ARS, Penn State, and homeowners. -
ArticlesPeach Disease - Scab
Peach scab, Cladosporium carpophilum, is an important disease in warm, humid peach-producing areas of the world. -
ArticlesPear Disease - Leaf Blight and Fruit Spot
Leaf blight and fruit spot is caused by the fungus Fabraea maculata, which infects the leaves, fruit, and shoots of pear and quince trees and the leaves of apple trees. -
ArticlesPear Disease - Sooty Mold
Sooty mold fungi of the genus Capnodium cause an unsightly blackening over the surface of fruit and leaves. -
ArticlesStone Fruit Disease - Bacterial Spot
Bacterial spot, caused by the bacterium Xanthomonas arboricola pv. pruni (formerly Xanthomonas campestris pv. pruni), occurs in most countries where stone fruit are grown. -
ArticlesStone Fruit Disease - Plum Pockets
In the northeastern United States, the most important disease affecting American-type plums is known as plum pockets, or bladder plum. It is caused by Taphrina communis. -
ArticlesPear Disease - Pear Scab
Pear scab resembles apple scab in nearly all respects and is caused by the closely related fungus Venturia pirina. -
ArticlesCherry Disease - Bacterial Canker
While bacterial canker, Pseudomonas syringae, can occur on all stone fruit trees and on apple and pear blossoms, it is only important in the Northeast on sweet and ornamental cherry trees. -
ArticlesApple Physiological Disorder - Necrotic Leaf Blotch
The cause of necrotic leaf blotch of apple is not known, and it is considered a physiological disorder. The disorder is most common on Golden Delicious worldwide. -
ArticlesApple Diseases - Sooty Blotch and Flyspeck
Affecting apple, crabapple, and pear trees, sooty blotch and flyspeck of apple are separate diseases, but both are normally present on the same fruit.



