Develops spore-trapping methods to detect airborne fungal pathogens threatening horticultural nurseries and maple production in Washington.
Fungal pathogens threaten Washington’s agricultural and natural resource sustainability. Disease management is costly, but early detection and informed production practices can reduce impacts. Spore-trapping offers a proven way to detect and quantify airborne fungal propagules, but has not been commonly applied in horticultural nurseries. This project will demonstrate their use in an ornamental nursery system for monitoring Cryptostroma corticale—the fungus causing sooty bark disease in maples. The objectives are to: (1) develop an approach to detect and quantify C. corticale spores and (2) validate the approach within a nursery by comparing results to forest and urban landscape settings. We hypothesize aerial C. corticale spores will be detectable in all three settings, but quantities will be the highest in forests due to proximity to symptomatic hosts. This project will build spore-trapping capacity at WSU, enhance detection of a cryptic pathogen, demonstrate practical nursery applications, and support Taylor McNees’ PhD training.
Products from this Project
Project Lead
Hulbert, J.
People
Hulbert, J. and McNees, T.
Project Dates
2026– 2027
Area of Focus
- Agricultural Practices
- Agricultural Technology
Topics
- Crop Protection
- Crops
- Natural Resources
- Production Systems
Project Status
In Progress
