Academic literature on the topic 'Snow blight'

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Journal articles on the topic "Snow blight"

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Blunt, Tamla, Tony Koski, and Ned Tisserat. "Effect of Snow Removal on Typhula Blight Development at High Elevation Golf Courses in Colorado." Plant Health Progress 14, no. 1 (2013): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/php-2013-0821-02-rs.

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Golf course superintendents at high elevations in Colorado apply fungicides in late October before permanent snow cover to suppress Typhula blight development. Many remove snow from putting greens in late winter or early spring assuming this practice helps suppress Typhula blight late into the snow season. They also remove snow to prevent ice formation and freeze damage to turfgrass during snowmelt. However, the benefits of spring snow removal in disease suppression and freeze avoidance have not been demonstrated in Colorado. We compared Typhula blight severity and turfgrass health in Kentucky
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Sakamoto, Y., and T. Miyamaoto. "Racodium snow blight in Japan." Forest Pathology 35, no. 1 (2005): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0329.2004.00383.x.

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Blunt, Tamla, Tony Koski, and Ned Tisserat. "Typhula Blight Severity as Influenced by the Number of Preventive Fungicide Applications and Snow Compaction." Plant Health Progress 14, no. 1 (2013): 13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/php-2013-0821-01-rs.

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Golf course superintendents at high elevations in Colorado have widely adopted a practice of making two or more applications of fungicides for Typhula snow mold control beginning up to a month before permanent snow cover in the belief that this provides better disease suppression than a single application of fungicides just prior to snow cover. Two fall applications of fungicides spaced approximately one month apart were compared to a single application just before snow cover for superiority in controlling Typhula blight. Of the nineteen paired comparisons from two golf courses over a 7-year p
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Parajuli, Madhav, Jacob Shreckhise, Donna Fare, et al. "Evaluation of Camellia Cultivars and Selections for Growth, Cold-hardiness, Flowering, and Disease Resistance in Tennessee, USA." HortScience 58, no. 12 (2023): 1533–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci17430-23.

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Susceptibility to low-temperature injury and diseases is a major concern associated with ornamental camellia production. To comprehensively understand their growth, cold-hardiness, flowering, and disease resistance, 24 camellia (Camellia spp. and hybrids) cultivars and selections were evaluated in McMinnville, TN, USA (USDA plant hardiness zone 7a). During Mar 2011, camellias were planted in the field plots. Plant height and canopy width were measured annually from 2011 to 2019, and low-temperature damage was recorded in 2014 and 2023. The flowering duration was recorded each year from 2011 to
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Vuorinen, M., and T. Kurkela. "Concentration of CO2under snow cover and the winter activity of the snow blight fungus Phacidium infestans." Forest Pathology 23, no. 6-7 (1993): 441–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0329.1993.tb00823.x.

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Titone, P., M. Mocioni, A. Garibaldi, and M. L. Gullino. "First Report of Typhula Blight on Agrostis stolonifera and Poa annua in Italy." Plant Disease 87, no. 7 (2003): 875. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis.2003.87.7.875c.

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During January 2002, Agrostis stolonifera and Poa annua turfgrasses on a golf course in Avigliana (northern Italy) exhibited 10- to 45-cm-diameter circular patches when the snow melted from the greens, tees, and fairways. Many patches coalesced to form large areas of strawcolored blighted turfgrass. At the patch margin, infected plants were covered with white-to-gray mycelium. Plants within patches were matted and appeared slimy with mycelium and sclerotia that were light pink, irregularly shaped, and less than 5 mm in diameter. Isolation from infected leaves on potato dextrose agar, supplemen
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Sheshegova, Tatyana, and Lucia Shchekleina. "Problems of phytoimmunity of grain crops in the Euro-Northeast of the Russian Federation and ways their solution." BIO Web of Conferences 36 (2021): 01011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/bioconf/20213601011.

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Breeding of grain crops for phytoimmunity in the FSBSU FASC of the Northeast is carried out in the conditions of natural and artificial epiphytotics. Every year, more than 1000 samples of winter rye, spring soft wheat, barley and oats of their own breeding and from the VIR collection are studied. In winter rye, studies are conducted on snow mold, root rot, powdery mildew, brown and stem rust, septoria blight, fusarium head blight, and ergot; in spring wheat – on root rot, septoria blight, fusarium head blight, powdery mildew, brown rust, loose smut; in barley – on root rot, net, dark brown blo
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Miyazawa, Mitsuo, Hideki Kawazoe, Yuji Sumi, and Mitsuro Hyakumachi. "Lytic Activity ofl-Menthol Derivatives against the Snow Blight Disease Fungus,Micronectriella nivalis." Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 51, no. 7 (2003): 1880–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf0210831.

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Kurkela, Timo T. "Ascospore production period of Phacidium infestans, a snow blight fungus on Pinus sylvestris." Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research 11, no. 1-4 (1996): 60–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02827589609382912.

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Burdon, J. J., Anders Wennstr�m, Lars Ericson, W. J. M�ller, and R. Morton. "Density-dependent mortality in Pinus sylvestris caused by the snow blight pathogen Phacidium infestans." Oecologia 90, no. 1 (1992): 74–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00317811.

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Book chapters on the topic "Snow blight"

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Brontë, Anne. "Chapter LI: An Unexpected Occurrence." In The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199207558.003.0053.

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We will now turn to a certain still, cold, cloudy afternoon about the commencement of December, when the first fall of snow lay thinly scattered over the blighted fields and frozen roads, or stored more thickly in the hollows of the deep...
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"The Dynamic of Revelation and Concealment: In the Falling Snow and the Narrational Architecture of Blighted Existences." In Caryl Phillips. Brill | Rodopi, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789401207409_027.

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