Hi @mazza
Many thanks for your question.
Unfortunately, Google is right. These orange balls or pustules on your shrub are Coral spot. Also known as Nectria cinnabarina which causes cankers on broadleaf shrubs and trees resulting in blisters on infected plants.
What is coral spot?
Coral spot is a fungal disease of woody plants, trees and shrubs causing branches to die back. Small coral-pink or orange raised spots (pustules) form after the branch dies which then go to infect other plants.
The presence of Coral spot usually is an indicator that the plant was already weakened, such as poorly pruned, damaged or after a very wet winter with exposure.
It tends to impact broadleaf trees and shrubs like Acers, Carpinus, Aesculus (Horse Chesnut), Fagus and Tilia (Lime) to name a few.
How does Coral spot start and spread?
Coral spot is usually a windborne fungus. It gets into weakened or damaged plants via two methods.
- Attacking young shrubs or trees through the bark after a fresh tissue is damaged in frost
- Through lenticels (pores) in living bark of stressed or damaged trees.
Can coral spot be cured?
No sadly not. The only way to treat coral spot is to cut out with sharp secateurs all the infected branches from an infected shrub. Then burn them. Do not compost them, as they will lay dormant and then potentially infect the rest of your garden if the compost is spread and used. Burning is the only effective treatment for destroying Coral spot.
In your case, if it's badly infected then I'd dig up and burn or dispose of the remains in a rubbish bin or green waste bin. If you can prune it out make sure you disinfect your cutting equipment before and after. To be honest its not worth the risk. I'd dig up and burn. Cleaning your spade and fork afterwards.
Sorry to be the bearer of bad news!
Hi @mazza
Many thanks for your question.
Unfortunately, Google is right. These orange balls or pustules on your shrub are Coral spot. Also known as Nectria cinnabarina which causes cankers on broadleaf shrubs and trees resulting in blisters on infected plants.
What is coral spot?
Coral spot is a fungal disease of woody plants, trees and shrubs causing branches to die back. Small coral-pink or orange raised spots (pustules) form after the branch dies which then go to infect other plants.
The presence of Coral spot usually is an indicator that the plant was already weakened, such as poorly pruned, damaged or after a very wet winter with exposure.
It tends to impact broadleaf trees and shrubs like Acers, Carpinus, Aesculus (Horse Chesnut), Fagus and Tilia (Lime) to name a few.
How does Coral spot start and spread?
Coral spot is usually a windborne fungus. It gets into weakened or damaged plants via two methods.
- Attacking young shrubs or trees through the bark after a fresh tissue is damaged in frost
- Through lenticels (pores) in living bark of stressed or damaged trees.
Can coral spot be cured?
No sadly not. The only way to treat coral spot is to cut out with sharp secateurs all the infected branches from an infected shrub. Then burn them. Do not compost them, as they will lay dormant and then potentially infect the rest of your garden if the compost is spread and used. Burning is the only effective treatment for destroying Coral spot.
In your case, if it's badly infected then I'd dig up and burn or dispose of the remains in a rubbish bin or green waste bin. If you can prune it out make sure you disinfect your cutting equipment before and after. To be honest its not worth the risk. I'd dig up and burn. Cleaning your spade and fork afterwards.
Sorry to be the bearer of bad news!