Fungi and fungicides; a practical manual, concerning the fungous diseases of cultivated plants and the means of preventing their ravages . the spores pro-duces on one side a bud having a shape similar to thespore itself; this bud produces another bud, and thisanother, until the substance of the original spore isexhausted. But botanists have not yet been able toinfect healthy plums with these spores or their buds. 62 FUXGl AXD FUXGICIDES The mycelium of the fungus also winters over in thetips of the young branches. Treatment.—A yigorous pruning of all affectedbranches some distance from the tip


Fungi and fungicides; a practical manual, concerning the fungous diseases of cultivated plants and the means of preventing their ravages . the spores pro-duces on one side a bud having a shape similar to thespore itself; this bud produces another bud, and thisanother, until the substance of the original spore isexhausted. But botanists have not yet been able toinfect healthy plums with these spores or their buds. 62 FUXGl AXD FUXGICIDES The mycelium of the fungus also winters over in thetips of the young branches. Treatment.—A yigorous pruning of all affectedbranches some distance from the tips, in order to removethe mycelium in the tissues, seems to be the most prac-ticable remedial measure. The joockets should, ofcourse, be removed before maturing, and the safest waywill be to burn all the material so cut off. Literature.—The best article upon this subject sofar, i^ublished in America, occurs in the United StatesDepartment of Agriculture Report for 1888 (). The Plum Fruit=scab Cladosporium carpophilum In Iowa and some other localities a comparativelylittle known disease has recently been noticed on native.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectpathoge, bookyear1896