Im. Rossell et al., Impacts of dogwood anthracnose (Discula destructiva Redlin) on the fruits of flowering dogwood (Cornus florida L.): Implications for wildlife, AM MIDL NAT, 146(2), 2001, pp. 379-387
Flowering dogwood (Cornus florida L.) fruits are an important fall food-for
many species of birds and mammals throughout the eastern United States. Ho
wever, the rapid spread of the fungal disease dogwood anthracnose (Discula
destructiva Redlin) has caused extensive mortality of dogwoods throughout t
he Appalachians. We examined the impacts of dogwood anthracnose on the prod
uction of inflorescences by flowering dogwoods in western North Carolina as
an indication of fruit production. We also collected ripe fruits in the fa
ll, weighed the pulps and analyzed them for protein, lipids, Ca, K, Mg and
P. Only one-third of 173 live trees flowered. Large trees were significantl
y more likely to flower than small trees, and as disease severity increased
, the probability of flowering decreased. Neither the mean number of inflor
escences per tree nor mean pulp weight differed among two-size classes or t
hree disease categories of trees. However, pulps from moderately infected t
rees contained significantly more Ca and P than pulps from lightly infected
trees. Pulps from severely infected trees also contained higher levels of
Ca than pulps from lightly diseased trees. A discriminant function analysis
examining all six nutritional variables separated lightly diseased pulps f
rom the other two categories along an axis represented by Ca, P and lipids.
Moderately diseased pulps were separated from severely diseased pulps by K
, P and protein. The most significant impact of dogwood anthracnose on frug
ivores will likely be the loss of flowering dogwoods from the landscape, wi
th the concomitant loss of actual and potential fruit production.