Rust diseases / RHS Gardening (2024)

The rusts are amongst the most common fungal diseases of garden plants. Trees, shrubs, herbaceous and bedding plants, grasses, bulbs, fruit and vegetables can all be affected. Rust diseases are unsightly and often (but not always) reduce plant vigour. In extreme cases, rust infection can even kill the plant.

Rust diseases / RHS Gardening (19)

Rust diseases

Quick facts

Common name Rust diseases
Scientific name Various
Plants affected Many different garden plants
Main symptoms Pustules on leaves and occasionally on other aerial parts. Pustules may be orange, yellow, brown, black or white in colour
Caused by Fungus
Timing Seen mainly in mid- to late summer and autumn

What are rusts?

The rusts are a group of fungal diseases affecting the aerial parts of plants. Leaves are affected most commonly, but rust can also be found occasionally on stems and even flowers and fruit.

The spore pustules produced by rusts vary in colour, according to the rust species and the type of spore that it is producing. Some rusts have complex life-cycles, involving two different host plants and up to five types of spore.

Symptoms

You may see the following symptoms:

  • Pale leaf spots eventually develop into spore-producing structures called pustules
  • The pustules are found most commonly on the lower leaf surface and produce huge numbers of microscopic spores
  • Pustules can be orange, yellow, brown, black or white. Some are a rusty brown colour, giving the disease its common name
  • In some cases there may be dozens of pustules on a single leaf
  • Severely affected leaves often turn yellow and fall prematurely
  • Pustules also sometimes form on leaf stalks (petioles), stems and, rarely, on flowers and fruit
  • Heavy infection often reduces the vigour of the plant. In extreme cases (e.g. with antirrhinum rust) the plant can be killed

Control

The RHS believes that avoiding pests, diseases and weeds by good practice in cultivation methods, cultivar selection, garden hygiene and encouraging or introducing natural enemies, should be the first line of control. If chemical controls are used, they should be used only in a minimal and highly targeted manner.

Non-chemical control

Detailed recommendations are given in the profiles available for rust diseases of individual plants and crops - see the links in the 'Biology' section, below. General recommendations are as follows:

  • The development of the disease can sometimes be slowed by picking off affected leaves as soon as they are seen, provided that this involves just a small number of leaves. Removing leaves in large numbers is likely to do more harm than good
  • Provide conditions that encourage strong growth, but avoid an excess of nitrogen fertiliser as this results in soft, lush growth that is easily colonised by rust
  • The leaves of plants affected by rust could be composted in spring and early summer, as the spores produced then are generally short-lived and should be killed by home composting systems (particularly if the material is left long enough so that it is fully degraded). In late summer and autumnsome rusts (usually those affecting deciduous plants) produceoverwintering spores.These spores are often very resilient, so at this time it would be better to dispose of affected material by other means
  • Resistant cultivars are available for some plants and crops, but this resistance is occasionally overcome by genetic changes within the rust fungus
  • In some cases no control is required. For example, many rusts of trees develop too late in the summer to have a significant effect on vigour, even though the whole tree may appear yellow or orange in late summer due to the huge number of rust pustules on the leaves

Fungicides

The RHS recommends that you don't use fungicides.Fungicides (including organic types) may reduce biodiversity, impact soil health and have wider adverse environmental effects. If you do intend to use a fungicide, please read the information given in the links and download below to ensure that use, storage and disposal of the product is done in a responsible and legally compliant manner.

The products listed in the ‘Fungicides for gardeners’ document below are legally available for use by home gardenersin the UK. This information is provided to avoid misuse of legal products and the use of unauthorised and untested products, which potentially has more serious consequences for the environment and wildlife than when products are used legally. Homemade products are not recommended as they are unregulated and usually untested.

No fungicides are currently available tohome gardeners with good activity againstrust diseases ofedible crops.

Download

Fungicides for gardeners (Adobe Acrobat pdf document outlining fungicides available to gardeners)

Links

Chemicals: using a sprayer
Chemicals: using safely and effectively
Chemicals: storing and disposing safely

Biology

Most of the RHS Gardening Advice enquiries regarding rust occur on the following hosts: allium species, antirrhinum, bluebell, box, chrysanthemum, fuchsia, heuchera,hollyhock,hypericum, lawn grasses,mahonia, pear, pelargonium, poplar, roseand vinca.

Rust fungi have very limited host ranges. For example, the rust that attacks antirrhinum is a different species from that affecting hollyhock. By late summer there may be many different rust species present on various plants in the garden.

Infection is favoured by prolonged leaf wetness, so rusts are usually diseases of wet summers.

Some rusts spend their entire life on one plant and produce just one or two types of spore. Others need two, often completely unrelated plants in order to complete their life-cycle, and can produce up to five different spore types. European pear rust, for example, spends part of its life on juniper.

The colour of the rust pustules varies according to the rust species and the type of spore that it is producing. Rose rust, for example, produces orange pustules for much of the summer, but in late summer and autumn these are replaced by black pustules containing overwintering spores.

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Rust diseases / RHS Gardening (2024)

FAQs

Rust diseases / RHS Gardening? ›

The rusts are a group of fungal diseases affecting the aerial parts of plants. Leaves are affected most commonly, but rust can also be found occasionally on stems and even flowers and fruit. The spore pustules produced by rusts vary in colour, according to the rust species and the type of spore that it is producing.

How do you treat rust on garden plants? ›

Rust treatment and control
  1. Remove and destroy all leaves and plant parts affected by rust.
  2. You might have to destroy badly infected plants completely to prevent them infecting other plants of the same species.
  3. Spray with a suitable rust control product containing fungicide, repeating as recommended.

Does rust fungus stay in soil? ›

Rust is most problematic during periods of wet, humid weather. The fungus overwinters in the soil on plant debris.

What plants does rust disease host? ›

Puccinia graminis is a macrocyclic heteroecious fungus that causes wheat stem rust disease. The sexual stage in this fungus occurs on the alternate host – barberry – and not wheat. The durable spore type produced on the alternate host allows the disease to persist in wheat even in more inhospitable environments.

What does rust disease look like on plants? ›

How to know if you have rust on your plants. Yellow, orange, or red spots on leaves. Raised pustules of powdery spores form on the lower leaf surface just below leaf spots. Pustules can occur on all green parts of the plant including stems, petioles, and the flower calyx.

What is the best fungicide for leaf rust? ›

GREEN COP® 500WP is an excellent contact fungicide with protective action for the control of wide range of diseases particularly Botrytis, rust, Angular leaf spot, Early and Late blight, Coffee leaf rust and Coffee berry disease (CBD) in various agricultural crops.

How do you control rust on plants organically? ›

Rust can be effectively controlled by Organic Super Sulphur. Once infestation is under control, use PLANThealth Spectrum as a prevention treatment.

What kills rust fungus? ›

Daconil® fungicides from GardenTech® brand offer highly effective, three-way protection to stop, control, and prevent rust and more than 65 other fungal diseases. Start preventive treatment whenever moist, moderate conditions favor the disease's development or at the first hint that rust is present.

Will rust fungus go away on its own? ›

Minimizing the shade your lawn gets can help kill lawn rust and prevent it from reappearing. Fungicides should only be applied to grass with lawn rust infestations in the most severe cases and before the disease goes dormant for the winter. Lawn rust may go away on its own if it is properly fertilized.

Does neem oil treat rust? ›

Neem oil, a botanical fungicide and pesticide, also controls rust. Some organic gardeners swear by baking soda to control garden fungus.

What are the 5 stages of rust? ›

Life Cycle of Rust Fungi

Rust fungi are macrocyclic when their life cycle includes five spore states that are often designated by Roman numerals: spermatia (0), aeciospores (I), urediniospores (II), teliospores (III), and basidiospores (IV).

How does rust fungus start? ›

If the weather is mild and the leaf is wet, the rust spore germinates. It then goes through the leaf stoma, or pore, into the plant. Once in, mycelium (fungal threads, or hyphae) starts growing and begins feeding on the plant.

Is rust bad for vegetable plants? ›

Since iron exists naturally, and is used to help your plants carry out vital processes, the answer is NO: Rust will not hurt your plant, if anything, it's going to help it.

What is the most effective method for managing rust disease? ›

Management. Rust diseases are favored by moderate temperatures that favor the growth of the host. Rust spores can be killed by high temperatures. Some rust infections, such as geranium rust (Puccinia pelargonii-zonalis), can be eradicated by hot water treatment of cuttings, although some damage to the host can occur.

Does overwatering cause rust? ›

Watering your lawn is important to keep it thriving, but too much water can lead to trouble because warm, moist, humid weather creates the perfect environment for rust fungus to develop.

Can you save a plant from rust? ›

If you find symptoms of rust, you can remove the leaf that it appears on. Don't remove more than 1/3 of the leaves at one time. Once you find rust in a vulnerable species, you will need to treat it to save that plant and others of the same species in your landscape.

What is a home remedy for rust on leaves? ›

Clean away all debris in between plants to prevent rust from spreading. Make sure to disinfect your pruning tools after each cut. Take one liter water and mix 5 ML of organic Neem Oil & 5 ML bath shampoo mix them well in the water. Spray that solution on every leaf until it's fully wet.

How to treat rose rust naturally? ›

Organic. Promptly prune out any infected stems and destroy them, along with any infected leaves. Grow roses with lots of room around them so the air can circulate, and prune out any congested growth.

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