Compendium of Citrus Diseases


Book Description

Covers the extensive progress made in citrus disease studies since the publication of the first popular edition 12 years ago. This modern edition contains newly discovered strains of citrus diseases, expanded details on many pathogens, and important classification revisions of citrus pathogens.










Diseases of Fruits and Vegetable Crops


Book Description

Diseases of Fruits and Vegetable Crops: Recent Management Approaches covers certain basic aspects of knowledge on diagnostic symptoms, modes of perpetuation and dissemination of pathogens, favorable conditions for disease development, and the latest management strategies for disease prevention and mitigation in vegetable crops, fruit crops, and plantation crops. With chapters written by experts working on specific fruit and vegetables disease, the volume covers many vegetable and fruit crops, including pineapples, grapes, apples, guava, litchi, potatoes, peas, beans, ginger and turmeric, and many more. Each chapter reviews the specific diseases relevant to the crop and their management and includes recent research findings. The information presented here will be valuable for plant protection officers, district horticulture officers, and other government personnel in the directorates and agencies of agriculture, horticulture and plant protection, as well as plant protection experts, vegetable specialists, and others.













Citrus Diseases and Their Control


Book Description

General considerations; Root and trunk diseases; Diseases of branches, twigs, and leaves; Fruit diseases.




Citrus Diseases of Florida and Cuba, Compared with Those of California (Classic Reprint)


Book Description

Excerpt from Citrus Diseases of Florida and Cuba, Compared With Those of California During the months of January and February, 1914, the writer made a trip to Florida and Cuba, for the purpose of collecting bud wood of as many varieties and strains of citrus trees as possible, and to collect information in regard to citrus conditions, especially in regard to citrus diseases. Although much had been written in regard to citrus diseases by workers in California, Florida, and Cuba, some uncertainty still existed as to the identity of some of the important diseases in these places. In some cases, different names were apparently being used for what was thought to be the same disease, and in other cases, the same name was being employed for what appeared to be entirely different diseases It also seemed that certain important diseases of one state were either absent or of minor importance in the others. This resulted in some cases in unnecessary uneasiness and confusion to citrus growers, especially in cases where articles or bulletins written expressly for con ditions in One state, were Copied by the agricultural papers of the others, So far as known, no one acquainted with citrus disease conditions in both Florida and California, had ever made a careful comparative study of them. It, therefore, seemed advisable that this comparative study be made So as to aid the growers and horticultural Officers to know which diseases were different and which were identical, and to enable them to more easily detect at once a new disease, should it by any unsuspected means get into the State. As the writer had been connected with the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station, working on citrus diseases for Six years prior to his work in California, it was thought that he was in a position to make this comparative study. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.