Not an answer to your disease question, but an observation about fruit. I’ve been marking wild persimmon trees on my field edges for the last 3 years. If I see fruit, I tie a piece of flag tape onto a branch, and depending on the size and location of the tree, I might clear some other trees around it. Several trees I marked last year do not have any fruit this year, and a couple trees that were not marked in the past, have some fruit this year. Leading me to believe persimmon trees will sometimes skip a year on fruit production???? Two trees marked and cleared around 3 years ago are getting nice sized and loaded with fruit. Hope to have more of those in the future! PS: the leaves on my persimmons always seem to have spots later in their growth.
Persimmons are not wind pollinated like chestnuts. They are insect pollinated and the male tree can be a mile away. I don't see any obvious disease in the pic. You can only really tell male from female when they are old enough to flower in the spring. It can easily take a native female tree 10 years to produce fruit.
Thanks,
Jack
Transgender trees?
bill
My assumption is that the spotting on the leaves is Anthracnose, a fungal disease. Don’t believe it is a worry.
You might reach out to Cliff England for his opinion. He has a nursery in Kentucky that sells persimmons and other fruit and nut trees.
Transgender trees?
bill
My dad has a persimmon tree at his place we've taken to calling "Bobby with an I" after the old song. It never had a persimmon on it since be bought the place 35 years ago, it also has all male flowers from the ones we've check. But last year and then this year its dropped a double handful of dark blue persimmons.