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Bacterial Canker and Decline of European Hazelnut [PDF]
European hazelnut or filbert (Corylus avellana L.) is a small to medium-sized tree or shrub that is widely distributed in Europe from Portugal to the southern part of the Urals and from Norway (68° north latitude) to Spain, Italy, and Greece. It also is native to eastern and central Asia, including Turkey, Syria, and Iran, and to Algeria in northern ...
Marco Scortichini
exaly +4 more sources
Systematic stepwise screening of new microbial antagonists for biological control of European canker
Neonectria ditissima is the causal agent of European canker. This pathogen causes cankers on apple branches and the main stem, which may lead to the loss of the whole tree. Chemical control is the essential component in disease management and no suitable biocontrol products are commercially available.
S K Schnabel, J Kohl
exaly +3 more sources
Identification of Regional Climatic Conditions Favorable for Development of European Canker of Apple [PDF]
Months of the year with high risk of European canker (Neonectria galligena) development in areas of the United States, Chile, England, and Northern Ireland were determined from published data. Moving-window analysis of long-term climatic data was used to classify disease risk in these areas in relation to rainfall and temperature conditions using the ...
Robert M Beresford, Kwang Soo Kim
exaly +3 more sources
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A Reappraisal of Canker and Dieback of European Larch
Forestry, 1969R. G. PAWSEY, C. W. T. YOUNG
exaly +2 more sources
The European Poplar Canker in the Vicinity of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Journal of Economic Entomology, 1918exaly +2 more sources
The European Larch Canker and its Relation to Certain Other Cankers of Conifers in the United States
Journal of Forestry, 1936Abstract The destructive European larch canker was first discovered in the United States in 1927, on European larch imported in 1904 and 1907 from Great Britain and planted in Massachusetts. In Europe this disease has been reported to attack Douglas fir and different species of pine, as well as species of larch.
Glenn G. Hahn, Theodore T. Ayers
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SCREENING OF APPLE CULTIVARS FOR RESISTANCE TO EUROPEAN CANKER, NEONECTRIA DITISSIMA
Acta Horticulturae, 2013European canker, caused by the fungus Neonectria ditissima, is a severe problem in apple production both in Sweden and in many other northern European countries. Even when applying fungicides and good horticultural practices, canker damage occurs almost yearly in nurseries and orchards. Some years, devastating outbreaks destroy numerous trees. To date,
Garkava-Gustavsson, L. +8 more
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Approaches for evaluation of resistance to European canker (Neonectria ditissima) in apple
Acta Horticulturae, 2016European canker is caused by the fungus Neonectria ditissima (Neonectria galligena, formerly Nectria galligena). The disease causes significant losses to apple production in Sweden and many other countries with a temperate wet climate. Application of fungicides and good horticultural practices do not prevent canker damage in nurseries and orchards ...
Garkava-Gustavsson, L. +5 more
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Lachnellula willkommii (European larch canker).
2021Abstract The European larch canker pathogen, L. willkommii, is apparently native to Japan, but established in Europe, where it became well known due to its damage to plantations of exotic and native Larix species, beginning in the nineteenth century. It attacks and spreads among the various species of Larix once it has been introduced.
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