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Sudden Oak Death

 Bark displaying Sudden Oak Death symptonsLeaves displaying Sudden Oak Death symptons

For more information, e-mail us or call (360) 586-8459


State SOD Quarantines (this link goes to a PDF developed by the California Dept. of Food & Agriculture -- it applies to Oregon, California & Washington) 

Sudden oak death (SOD) is a serious plant disease that attacks many types of plants and trees common to the Pacific Northwest, including azaleas, big leaf maples, huckleberry, California bay laurel, camellia, myrtles, honeysuckle, Pacific madrone, Douglas fir, rhododendrons, and vibernum. It does not affect humans and is not a food safety concern.

Sudden oak death is caused by a pathogen called Phytophthora ramorum. The pathogen is not a fungus or a bacterium, but a member of a unique group of organisms called Oomycetes. Oomycetes share some characteristics of fungi but are biologically different. 

Symptoms of sudden oak death  

Symptoms vary from plant to plant, and may include leaf spots, needle and tip blight, shoot-tip dieback, and canker formations. Many other plant pathogens cause the same symptoms. The only way to confirm the presence of sudden oak death is through laboratory testing.

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Additional resources

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

California Oak Mortality Task Force

Oregon Department of Agriculture

California Department of Food and Agriculture

Sudden Oak Death and Phytophthora ramorum: A Guide for Forest Managers, Christmas Tree Growers, and Forest Tree Nursery Operators in Oregon and Washington

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