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  2. Verticillium wilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verticillium_wilt

    Verticillium wilt is a wilt disease affecting over 350 species of eudicot plants. It is caused by six species of Verticillium fungi: V. dahliae, ...

  3. Verticillium longisporum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verticillium_longisporum

    Verticillium longisporum, also known as Verticillium Wilt, is a fungal plant pathogen that commonly infects canola. V. longisporum can attack other brassica plants as well as woody ornamentals. A main symptom of the infected plant is wilting. In America, V. longsiporum primarily effects eudicot plants. This pathogen can be very devastating and ...

  4. Verticillium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verticillium

    Verticillium is a genus of fungi in the division Ascomycota, and are an anamorphic form of the family Plectosphaerellaceae. The genus used to include diverse groups comprising saprobes and parasites of higher plants, insects, nematodes, mollusc eggs, and other fungi, thus the genus used to have a wide-ranging group of taxa characterised by simple but ill-defined characters.

  5. List of almond diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_almond_diseases

    Bacterial blast: Pseudomonas syringae ... Verticillium wilt = Blackheart [2] Verticillium dahliae [1] [2] Nematode diseases. Nematode diseases of almond [2] include ...

  6. Wilt disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilt_disease

    The bacteria need a film of water to facilitate infection. The bacteria can also be transmitted from one plant to another when beetles feed on an infected plant and the bacteria becomes attached to the beetles mouthparts. [4] The bacteria Ralstonia solanacearum and related species cause bacterial wilt of bananas and plantains. [5]

  7. Verticillium dahliae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verticillium_dahliae

    Verticillium dahliae invades the host plant via natural wounds or by penetrating the root tissue. Following entry, the pathogen enters the xylem where conidia are spread throughout the host. The plant responds to the pathogen by producing tyloses which block the xylem, resulting in decreased water flow and wilting.

  8. List of elm diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_elm_diseases

    Bacterial diseases; Bacterial wetwood/slime flux ... Verticillium wilt Verticillium albo-atrum. Verticillium dahlia. Violet root rot Helicobasidium brebissonii.

  9. List of cineraria diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cineraria_diseases

    1 Bacterial diseases. 2 Fungal diseases. 3 Nematodes, parasitic. ... Verticillium wilt Verticillium albo-atrum: White rust Albugo tragopogonis: Nematodes, parasitic.