. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. BLACK ROT OF CRUCIFEROUS PLANTS. 3*3 The greatest contrast to this prompt destruction ever obtained by the writer was on cabbage-plants dwarfed and forced to make a very slow growth by keeping them for a long time in 4-inch pots. These plants, which were inoculated in the autumn, developed the disease, became stunted, and then appeared to grow out of it, but on some of them it reappeared the next summer at the top of the plants in young leaves which were unques- tionably infected from the stem by way of the leaf-traces. Fifteen months from the


. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. BLACK ROT OF CRUCIFEROUS PLANTS. 3*3 The greatest contrast to this prompt destruction ever obtained by the writer was on cabbage-plants dwarfed and forced to make a very slow growth by keeping them for a long time in 4-inch pots. These plants, which were inoculated in the autumn, developed the disease, became stunted, and then appeared to grow out of it, but on some of them it reappeared the next summer at the top of the plants in young leaves which were unques- tionably infected from the stem by way of the leaf-traces. Fifteen months from the date of inoculation, and more than 30 cm. above the point where the needle entered, the organism was recovered in pure culture from the woody stem of one of these tall spindling plants. There can be no doubt that the severity of the disease varies with varying seasons. In moist warm seasons the disease often makes a clean sweep on fields which may yield a crop the following season, provided the weather is dry enough to induce slow growth and to prevent wholesale infection by way of the Owing to its wide distribution, and the ease with which infections may be obtained on a variety of plants, this is a very good disease for the use of classes in schools. For experimental or demonstration purposes there is a choice in the parts to be inocu- lated. Young rapidly growing leaves and plants are better than old or slow growing ones, and infection by needle-pricks generally succeeds best when made into the upper fleshy part of stems immediately under leaves or when made into the midrib. Cabbage plants when inoculated on the lower leaves often throw off these leaves before stem-infection has taken place. Brenner notes that when he inoculated into the petiole of the leaf this was frequently thrown off in course of a few weeks. He found inoculations on secondary veins or peripheral veins less successful than those on primary veins. *Fig. in.—Cross-section of root of inocula


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