. Annual report of the Agricultural Experiment Station. Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). The Cultivated Native Plums and Chekries. 93 asaw varieties and the Wild Goose. In Michigan I have seen it only on the fruit, which it changeis into conspicuous bladders. In Marj'land and Georgia it is common on shoots of wild Chickasaws and on cultivated Wild Groose, and it rarely attacks the fruit. It does considerable injury every spring.* '• (5. An obscure blight often attacks native plums — as Wild Goose, Robinson, Mariannn and others — causing the


. Annual report of the Agricultural Experiment Station. Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). The Cultivated Native Plums and Chekries. 93 asaw varieties and the Wild Goose. In Michigan I have seen it only on the fruit, which it changeis into conspicuous bladders. In Marj'land and Georgia it is common on shoots of wild Chickasaws and on cultivated Wild Groose, and it rarely attacks the fruit. It does considerable injury every spring.* '• (5. An obscure blight often attacks native plums — as Wild Goose, Robinson, Mariannn and others — causing the branches to die back during the growing season. The leaves and large branches and sometimes the whole tree wilt and become brown without apparent cause, and sometimes the tree dies. The roots do not appear to be involved, for they often send up healthy shoots after the entire top has died. This blight has been known in middle Georgia for several years and does more injury to plums than all other troubles combined. § » " 7. The peach-rosette also attacks the native plums and per- haps is destined to make more trouble than any other disease in the south and west. (See Jour. INIycology IV, 143; same VI, No. 4; also bulletin of Div. Veg. Pathologj^ on ' Additional Evidence of the Communicability of Peach Yellows and Peach Eosette.')" The fruit-scab (Fig. 11), which injures many varieties, iJsi dis- cussed for me by Professor L. H. Pammel, of the Iowa Agricul- tural OoUege:. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station. Ithaca, N. Y. : The University


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