Results 151 to 160 of about 69,583 (195)
Genome-Wide Analysis Reveals Chitinases as Putative Defense-Related Proteins Against Fungi in the Genomes of <i>Coffea arabica</i> and Its Progenitors. [PDF]
Silva FR +4 more
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Role of Biological Control in Management of Invasive Exotic Arthropod Pests and Weeds in India. [PDF]
Muniappan R +4 more
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Production and trade of specialty coffee in Brazil. [PDF]
Sera GH +4 more
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Ce livre destiné aux chercheurs et aux étudiants en phytopathologie constitue un état des connaissances sur la rouille du caféier et s'appuie sur une revue de la littérature sur le sujet, laquelle est souvent à diffusion limitée. Il comporte 7 chapitres : introduction (importance économique, symptômes...); biologie et épidémiologie; approche ...
Kushalappa, A.C. (ed.) +1 more
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Advances in Coffee Rust Research
Annual Review of Phytopathology, 1989World coffee production is worth about $15 billion annually, providing important export revenues and labor opportunities for tropical countries (23). Coffee rust, induced by Hemileia vastatrix Berkeley and Broome, is a major disease of Coffea arabica, which constitutes about 75% of total coffee production.
Ajjamada C. Kushalappa +1 more
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PANS Pest Articles & News Summaries, 1970
(1970). Coffee Leaf Rust. PANS Pest Articles & News Summaries: Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 606-624.
F. J. Nutman, F. M. Roberts
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(1970). Coffee Leaf Rust. PANS Pest Articles & News Summaries: Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 606-624.
F. J. Nutman, F. M. Roberts
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Coffee Berry Disease and Coffee Leaf Rust in Kenya
Outlook on Agriculture, 1964Recent research into the biology of the fungi causing coffee berry disease and coffee leaf rust has resulted in a better understanding of the spread of these diseases under East African conditions and of the steps necessary for their control. In both cases timely checking of the organisms in advance of their phases of rapid proliferation and dispersal
F. J. Nutman, F. M. Roberts
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Coffee rust—epidemiology and control
Crop Protection, 1982Abstract The history and spread of coffee rust, from its first detection in Sri Lanka to the latest developments in Central America, are discussed. The epidemiology of the disease has been a subject of controversy in the past, but during the last decade most of the questions concerning the mode of spore dispersal seem to have been answered.
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Ecological perspectives on the coffee leaf rust
2022This chapter provides an ecological approach to the problem of coffee leaf rust. It first provides a brief overview of the research which has stemmed from a more technocentric approach to understanding and subsequently control CLR. The authors intentionally keep this section brief, but try to highlight areas which are of potential ecological and ...
Zachary Hajian-Forooshani +1 more
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