Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Common Names of Diseases, The American Phytopathological Society; Tomato Diagnostic Key, The Cornell Plant Pathology Vegetable Disease Web Page; Tomato Diseases (Fact Sheets and Information Bulletins), The Cornell Plant Pathology Vegetable Disease Web Page; Gautam, P. 2008. Bacterial Speck Disease of Tomato: An Insight into Host-Bacteria ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file
The tomato leaf mold fungus is a specific pathogen that only infects tomatoes, mainly in greenhouses. The symptoms of this disease commonly occurs on foliage, and it develops on both sides of the leaf on the adaxial and abaxial surface. The older leaves are infected first and then the disease moves up towards young leaves. [2]
A disease with similar symptoms had emerged earlier in Ohad, Israel in the Autumn of 2014 and began to spread in the country within a year. Transmission electron microscopy showed the presence of rod-like viral structures consistent with Tobamovirus and the complete sequence showed high sequence identity to the Jordanian isolate of tomato brown ...
The tomato (US: / t ə m eɪ t oʊ /, UK: / t ə m ɑː t oʊ /), Solanum lycopersicum, is a plant whose fruit is an edible berry that is eaten as a vegetable. The tomato is a member of the nightshade family that includes tobacco, potato, and chili peppers. It originated from and was domesticated in western South America.
Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) is a DNA virus from the genus Begomovirus and the family Geminiviridae.TYLCV causes the most destructive disease of tomato, and it can be found in tropical and subtropical regions causing severe economic losses.
Pseudocercospora fuligena is a fungal plant pathogen infecting tomatoes. [2] It is the cause of the fungal disease black leaf mold. [3] The fungus was first described in the Philippines in 1938 and has since been reported in numerous countries throughout the tropics and subtropics.
Alternaria solani is a fungal pathogen that produces a disease in tomato and potato plants called early blight. The pathogen produces distinctive "bullseye" patterned leaf spots and can also cause stem lesions and fruit rot on tomato and tuber blight on potato. Despite the name "early", foliar symptoms usually occur on older leaves. [3]