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dc.contributor.authorMcCracken, F.I.
dc.contributor.authorRousseau, R.
dc.date.accessioned2018-09-25T14:30:24Z
dc.date.available2018-09-25T14:30:24Z
dc.date.created2011-11-14
dc.date.issued1991
dc.identifier.urihttps://bibliotecadigital.infor.cl/handle/20.500.12220/7640
dc.description3 páginas
dc.description.abstractOf the trees in a 6-year-old sycamore seed orchard in Carlisle County, KY, 66 percent developed obscure vertical cankers in the spring of 1990. A variety of wound-invading saprophytes, including Hyalodendron sp., Stachylidium sp., Botrytis sp., Phialophora sp., Trichoderma sp., and Fusarium sp., were isolated from canker wood. Weather records indicated that trees were subjected to abnormally low temperatures from December 15-25, 1989. Five clones demonstrated an apparent tolerance to the cold damage, but there was no correlation between clone response and geographic origin of the clones. The consistent southern orientation of cankers, record low temperatures in 1989, and apparent absence of virulent pathogens strongly suggest that the cankers resulted from freeze damage.
dc.description.uriurl.ie/di28
dc.languageInglés
dc.publisherUSDA Forest Service. Southern Forest Experiment Station
dc.relation.ispartofseriesResearch Note SO
dc.subjectESTADOS UNIDOS
dc.subjectHONGOS DEL ARBOL
dc.subjectPATOLOGIA FORESTAL
dc.subjectPlatanus occidentalis
dc.titleCold-induced cankers and associated fungi in a sycamore seed orchard
dc.typeLibro
infor.id15337
infor.mfn9248
infor.politica.web0
infor.numeroserie366
infor.lugardepublicacionNew Orleans, Louisiana


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