The postentry quarantine period has been reduced from six months to two months for imports of rooted and unrooted cuttings of chrysanthemums, Leucanthemella serotina and Nipponathemum nipponicum. The quarantine period was established to prevent the spread of chrysanthemum white rust caused by the fungus Puccinia horiana.
USDA-Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Division evaluated the “available scientific literature” and found that two months was an “adequate amount of time for white rust to express” symptoms. Most of the available research concluded white rust symptoms typically appear between five to 14 days, depending on climatic conditions. Higher temperatures increase the latency period, but typically not more than 14 days, according to PPQ.
Control efforts against white rust in the
After a white rust outbreak in
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