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Vascular wilt of Phoenix canariensis in New South Wales caused by Fusarium oxysporum
Australasian Plant Pathology, 1996Fusarium oxysporum was shown to be the cause of a vascular wilt of Phoenix canariensis in New South Wales. Pathogenicity to both P. canariensis and P. reclinata was demonstrated in glasshouse inoculation studies. The pathogenicity to P. dactylifera of isolates of F. oxysporum from P. canariensis was inconclusive.
M.J. Priest, D.B. Letham
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2021
The paper describes the preliminary results obtained using electrophoresis techniques to characterise genetically'two Phoenix species present in the Canary Islands. \- Electrophoretic techniques were used to asses the degree of genetic variation and genetic differentiation among the Canarian palm (Phoenh canariensis) and the date palm (Phoenix ...
Sosa, Pedro A. +3 more
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The paper describes the preliminary results obtained using electrophoresis techniques to characterise genetically'two Phoenix species present in the Canary Islands. \- Electrophoretic techniques were used to asses the degree of genetic variation and genetic differentiation among the Canarian palm (Phoenh canariensis) and the date palm (Phoenix ...
Sosa, Pedro A. +3 more
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Phoenix canariensis (Canary Island date palm)
PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank, 2022openaire +1 more source
Triterpenes, Waxes and Tricin in Phoenix canariensis
Journal of Natural Products, 1981Begoña Garcia +3 more
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Phoenix Canariensis, la princesa de las palmeras y nuestra mejor embajadora
202130
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2019
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Spennemann, Dirk Hr, Pike, Melissa
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(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Spennemann, Dirk Hr, Pike, Melissa
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Epifitska flora na palmi Phoenix canariensis Chabaud u Hrvatskoj
2017Epiphytic flora on the palms Phoenix canariensis researched at 16 sites along the Croatian Adriatic coast and islands (Split, Trogir, Zadar, Opatija, Cavtat, Dubrovnik, Pula, Mali Losinj, Ploce, Makarska, and islands Rava, Brac, Hvar, Vis, Rab and Ugljan). There have been recorded 104 species classified into 53 families.
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