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Cedar-apple Rust Gall - Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae This fungus has the fancy name, Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae, which means &quot;naked spore-bearer of the eastern juniper tree.&quot; It&#039;s a heteroecious rust, which means that it requires two species of plants to complete its life cycle. Those two species of plants are: the eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginianus) and apple trees (Malus sylvestris). It&#039;s also an obligate pathogen, so it can&#039;t live without those hosts. It has four different stages, the most impressive of which is the orange teliospore stage because this is when the gall sprouts gelatinous, orange horns that look like tentacles. Pretty impressive. To further add to its coolness, each gelatinous spore horn is actually composed of hundreds of two-celled teliospores.<br />
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Habitat: Eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginianus) Cedar-apple Rust,Geotagged,Gymnosporangium,Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae,Spring,United States,gall Click/tap to enlarge

Cedar-apple Rust Gall - Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae

This fungus has the fancy name, Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae, which means "naked spore-bearer of the eastern juniper tree." It's a heteroecious rust, which means that it requires two species of plants to complete its life cycle. Those two species of plants are: the eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginianus) and apple trees (Malus sylvestris). It's also an obligate pathogen, so it can't live without those hosts. It has four different stages, the most impressive of which is the orange teliospore stage because this is when the gall sprouts gelatinous, orange horns that look like tentacles. Pretty impressive. To further add to its coolness, each gelatinous spore horn is actually composed of hundreds of two-celled teliospores.

Habitat: Eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginianus)

    comments (4)

  1. The time it must have taken for evolution to result in such a specialization! Posted 5 years ago
    1. Oh, and I brought one of the galls home! I soaked it in water and hope the horns get gelatinous! If not, I'll dissect it and see if I can get some shots of the inside. Posted 5 years ago
      1. That would be very interesting. Please do label it before it ends in the trash again. Posted 5 years ago
        1. Haha! I just informed everyone that it is not to be tampered with. Not sure the cats will listen though. They love it when I bring things home. I have 4 bagworm cocoons hanging in a mesh cube right now, and the cats keep smacking the cube. Hopefully the moths won't be born with brain damage. Posted 5 years ago

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"Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae" is a plant pathogen that causes cedar-apple rust. In virtually any location where apples or crabapples and Eastern red-cedar coexist, cedar apple rust can be a destructive or disfiguring disease on both the apples and cedars. Quince and hawthorn are the most common host and many species of juniper can substitute for the Eastern red cedars.

Similar species: Pucciniales
Species identified by Christine Young
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By Christine Young

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Uploaded Apr 1, 2020. Captured Apr 1, 2020 13:54 in 3280 Franklin Ave, Millbrook, NY 12545, USA.
  • Canon EOS 80D
  • f/8.0
  • 1/128s
  • ISO100
  • 100mm