blight canker
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A plant disease symptom: A specific, visible symptom of the plant disease known as fire blight, characterized by the formation of localized, sunken, and often discolored dead areas (cankers) on the bark of branches, twigs, or the trunk of a susceptible plant, typically a tree in the rose family like apple or pear.
Usage
- Blight canker is a technical term used primarily in plant pathology, agriculture, horticulture, and arboriculture.
- It describes a symptomatic stage of a disease, not the disease itself. The underlying disease is fire blight.
- It is used as a countable noun (e.g., "several blight cankers") to refer to the individual lesions.
Examples
- The orchard inspector identified blight canker on several branches of the pear tree, indicating an advanced stage of fire blight infection.
- Pruning during the dormant season helps remove blight cankers and reduces the source of bacteria for the next growing season.
- A key diagnostic feature of blight canker is the darkened, sunken appearance of the bark.
Advanced Usage
- The term is often part of a disease management protocol. Instructions may state: "All wood showing symptoms of blight canker should be cut at least 30 cm below the visible infection and destroyed."
- It can be used in a metaphorical or literary sense to describe something that causes a localized, spreading decay or ruin, though this is rare. (e.g., "The scandal was a blight canker on the institution's reputation.")
Variants and Related Words
- Fire blight (n): The bacterial disease () of which blight canker is a symptom.
- Canker (n): A general term for a localized, dead, often sunken area on a stem, branch, or trunk, caused by various fungi, bacteria, or environmental factors. Blight canker is a specific type of canker.
- Twig blight (n): Another phase of fire blight where the infection kills shoot tips, often preceding or accompanying the canker phase.
Synonyms
- Fire blight canker (This is a more descriptive full term.)
- Canker lesion (General, but context-specific.)
Notes on Meaning
- The term is highly specific. It does not refer to:
- A human or animal disease.
- A general state of decay or blight (e.g., urban blight).
- The initial blossom or shoot blight phases of the fire blight disease, though it may result from them.
Noun
- a phase of fire blight in which cankers appear