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The Ecology of Soil-Borne Human Pathogens

2012
The surface of the Earth, with the exception of the oceans and polar ice caps, is in large part covered with a marvelously complex layer of material called soil, from which we derive a host of useful products including fiber, fuels, building materials, animal forage, many mineral commodities, natural medicines (including antibiotics), and most of our ...
Mark W. Bultman   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Quarantine Aspects of the Epidemiology of Soil‐borne Pathogens

EPPO Bulletin, 1972
AbstractFor plant quarantine activities, more biological information on diseases in crops and natural vegetation along with more co‐operation are needed. Some phenomena, and results of studies on distribution and occurrence of fungi and nematodes are given in order to stress this necessity.
K. Kuiper, G.H. Boerema
openaire   +1 more source

Solar Energy for Weakening Soil-Borne Pathogens

2021
Very often the most interesting results in the agricultural sector come from acute observations by farmers. It was the mid-1970s when an Israeli farmer noticed that the fields in which plastic films, used to reduce weed growth during the summer, were kept on the ground longer presented, subsequently, more limited attacks than some soil-borne fungal ...
openaire   +1 more source

Diseases caused by soil-borne pathogens

2006
The soil is a favourable habitat for microorganisms and is inhabited by a wide range of bacteria, fungi, algae, viruses and protozoa. Soils contain large numbers of microorganisms – usually between one and ten million per gram of soil – with bacteria and fungi the most prevalent. Some microorganisms present in soil are also able to infect plants. These
openaire   +2 more sources

Soil-Borne Pathogens and Their Interactions with the Soil Environment

2010
Wheat yields in thirteenth century Europe have been estimated at 385 kg ha−1 (Pretty 1990; Houghton 1996), more than half a millennium later, by 1939 they had been increased to little more than 2 t ha−1. Subsequently, in the period 1952–1986 scientific and technologically based innovation applied to farming increased yields by an average value of 2.6 ...
Geoffrey R. Dixon, Emma L. Tilston
openaire   +1 more source

Ecology of Soil-Borne Pathogens in Crop Fields

2002
Soil is a resourceful reservoir for many plant pathogens. Roots interact with soil-borne plant pathogens exhibiting temporal and spatial variations. If the pathogen becomes dominant, disease outbreak is the result. In general, it is well known that fungi constitute the largest number of plant pathogens.
Youn Su Lee, Min Woong Lee
openaire   +1 more source

Ecology of Soil-Borne Plant Pathogens

Soil Science, 1965
Kenneth F. Baker, William C. Snyder
openaire   +2 more sources

Root Diseases and Soil-Borne Pathogens

Mycologia, 1972
Eugene H. Varney   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

The climate‐driven distribution and response to global change of soil‐borne pathogens in agroecosystems

Global Ecology and Biogeography, 2023
Ziheng Peng, Jiejun Qi, Xun Qian
exaly  

Biological control of soil-borne pathogens in arid lands: a review

Journal of Plant Diseases and Protection, 2023
Mueed Ali Sulaiman   +1 more
exaly  

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