Erythricium salmonicolor has a very broad host range. The host plants of greatest importance include rubber,
tea,
coffee, cacao,
grapefruit,
orange,
nutmeg,
mango,
apple,
coca, and
kola. Pink Disease can cause heavy losses including individual branch death to the loss of the whole tree in cases where the main stem or several branches are affected.
E. salmonicolor causes girdling cankers which prevent the normal function of some physiological processes, eventually leading to
defoliation and die-back of outer branches. On rubber trees, initial stages of infection appear as drops of
latex and silky-white
mycelial growth on the
bark surface. In
black pepper plants, sterile pink to white
pustules approximately 1 mm in diameter appear on young green stems. In citrus trees, sterile pustules may appear first, and in some cases the trees may have oozing sap or gum. In cacao trees, first symptoms of infection usually present as a sparse white mycelium on the bark surface, which can be easily overlooked. Trees are most susceptible in areas with high levels of rainfall, such as
tropical rainforests. Diagnosis of Pink Disease is typically achieved through the use of
light microscopy and
scanning electron microscopy to observe
sporulation of the pathogen. ==Management and control==