Biological Control Of Water Weeds With Plant Pathogens PDF Download

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Natural Enemies

Natural Enemies
Author: Ann E. Hajek
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 396
Release: 2004-02-12
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9780521653855

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Biological Control of Aquatic Weeds with Plant Pathogens

Biological Control of Aquatic Weeds with Plant Pathogens
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 28
Release: 1976
Genre:
ISBN:

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In the early 1970's, an effort was initiated to locate and isolate pathogenic organisms for use in the biological control of aquatic plants with special reference to waterhyacinth. This report describes the exhaustive search which has been conducted both in the United States and in several foreign countries. Informaton on laboratory and field research studies is presented as well as the current state of the art in this area of aquatic plant management research. (Author).


Microbial Control of Weeds

Microbial Control of Weeds
Author: D.O. TeBeest
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1461596807

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It is appropriate at this time to reflect on two decades of research in biological control of weeds with fungal plant pathogens. Some remarkable events have occurred in the last 20 years that represent a flurry of activity far beyond what could reasonably have been predicted. In 1969 a special topics review article by C. L. Wilson was published in Annual Reviews of Phytopathology that examined the literature and the potential for biological control of weeds with plant pathogens. In that same year, experiments were conducted in Arkansas that determined whether a fungal plant pathogen could reduce the infestation of a single weed species in rice fields. In Florida a project was under way to determine the potential use of a soil-borne plant pathogen as a means for controlling a single weed species in citrus groves. Work in Australia was published that described experiments that sought to determine whether a pathogen could safely and deliberately be imported and released into a country to control a weed of agricultural importance. All three projects were successful in the sense that Puccinia chondrillina was released into Australia to control rush skeleton weed and was released later into the United States as well, and that Colletotrichum gloeosporioides f.sp. aeschynomene and Phytophthora palmivora were later both marketed for the specific purpose of controlling specific weed species.