Almond canker diseases are destructive and can reduce the yield as well as the lifespan of almond orchards. These diseases may affect the trunk and branches of both young and mature trees and can result in tree death soon after orchard establishment in severe cases. Between 2015 and 2018, 70 almond orchards were visited throughout the Central Valley of California upon requests from farm advisors for canker disease diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalifornia produces 99.1% of pistachios grown in the United States, and diseases affecting pistachio rootstocks represent a constant challenge to the industry. Field surveys of fungi associated with pistachio rootstocks with symptoms of crown rot and stem canker in three central California counties followed by phylogenetic analyses of translation elongation factor 1-α and second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II gene fragments identified three species (, , and ) and two species ( and ).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn April-August 2018, samples of galled roots with rhizosphere soil were collected from almond orchards in Atwater, Merced County and Bakersfield, Kern County, California. Almond trees () grafted on 'Hansen 536' and 'Brights Hybrid5' (peach-almond hybrid) rootstocks showed strong symptoms of growth decline. Extracted root-knot nematodes were identified by both morphological and molecular methods as .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReducing fumigant emissions is essential for minimizing the environmental impacts of pre-plant soil fumigation. Low permeability plastic films are effective at reducing emissions but have high initial purchase, installation, and disposal costs. The objective of this study was to evaluate if deep fumigant injection and biochar soil amendments can reduce emissions, improve fumigant distribution in soil, and provide acceptable control of plant parasitic nematodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFABSTRACT The fungal plant pathogen Microsphaeropsis amaranthi is a candidate bioherbicide for the control of weedy Amaranthus species since it grows and sporulates readily in culture, is a pathogen of a number of important weed species, and is host-restricted to the family Amaranthaceae. This study was designed to determine the optimum and limiting environmental conditions for the efficacy of foliar applications of M. amaranthi for the control of common waterhemp.
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