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Ditylenchus destructor is a plant pathogenic nematode commonly known as the potato rot nematode. Other common names include the iris nematode, the potato tuber eelworm and the potato tuber nematode. It is an endoparasitic, migratory nematode commonly found in areas such as the United States, Europe, central Asia and Southern Africa.
Terbufos is used on various crops including bananas, beans, citrus, coffee, groundnuts, sorghum, potatoes, sunflowers and maize as soil cover to combat wireworms, mossy beetles, beet flies and the black bean louse. [6] [7] It is not approved for use in the European Union. [8]
Bacterial Diseases; Bacterial wilt = brown rot: Ralstonia solanacearum = Pseudomonas solanacearum Blackleg and bacterial soft rot: Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. atrosepticum = Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica
A stinky, avoidable sewage spill has fostered one of the most potent environmental citizen action groups to come along in quite awhile in Central Florida – the Friends of the Loch Haven Chain of ...
Bactericera cockerelli, [1] also known as the potato psyllid, is a species of psyllid native to southern North America. Its range extends from Central America north to the American Pacific Northwest and parts of Manitoba , in Canada .
Potato cyst nematodes are important economically due to the fact that they can substantially reduce crop yields. Globodera pallida are able to cause 80% yield loss in a potato field if left untreated. [8] On a more global scale, the Australian potato industry is worth about AUD$500 million yearly which equates to $340 million U.S. dollars. [7] [9]
His kids — who took part in an elementary school-led beach cleanup that morning — saw the same thing. “I warned them as soon as they got to the beach,” Platt said.
The pronotum and wing covers are covered in dense, short greyish hairs. The larva is known as a wireworm and lives in the soil. It is yellow, slender, stiff and leathery, and grows to a length of about 20 mm (0.8 in). The centre of the mandible has a small tooth for gnawing. [3]