Report of the Botanical Dept |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 28
Page 283
... Club - Root ........... Experiments with Potatoes ..... Further Experiments with Potatoes ...... Potatoes in Turnip Land ......... Experiments with Sweet Potatoes ...... Additional Experiments with Sulphur ... The Stem Rot of Sweet ...
... Club - Root ........... Experiments with Potatoes ..... Further Experiments with Potatoes ...... Potatoes in Turnip Land ......... Experiments with Sweet Potatoes ...... Additional Experiments with Sulphur ... The Stem Rot of Sweet ...
Page 290
... club - root common to these two crops , and in adding to the list the following crops , namely , peppers , egg - plants , cucumbers and celery . In land adjoining to the acre privileges were granted for experiments upon beets and ...
... club - root common to these two crops , and in adding to the list the following crops , namely , peppers , egg - plants , cucumbers and celery . In land adjoining to the acre privileges were granted for experiments upon beets and ...
Page 294
... club - root , caused by the fungus Plas- modiophora Brassica Wor . The malady is also destructive to several other cultivated plants , closely related to and included with it in the same group of plants - the mustard family . Probably ...
... club - root , caused by the fungus Plas- modiophora Brassica Wor . The malady is also destructive to several other cultivated plants , closely related to and included with it in the same group of plants - the mustard family . Probably ...
Page 295
... club - root , and proved decidedly harmful to the turnips . Ordinary unleached wood - ashes , when applied in the following amounts , namely , 300 , 150 , and 75 bushels per arce , respectively , failed to diminish the clubbing of ...
... club - root , and proved decidedly harmful to the turnips . Ordinary unleached wood - ashes , when applied in the following amounts , namely , 300 , 150 , and 75 bushels per arce , respectively , failed to diminish the clubbing of ...
Page 296
... club - root fungus , and destroyed more than half the turnips . Cupram was also applied to a single belt in 1894 , and gave no encouraging results . Sulphate of copper ( bluestone ) , when applied as a powder in early spring at the rate ...
... club - root fungus , and destroyed more than half the turnips . Cupram was also applied to a single belt in 1894 , and gave no encouraging results . Sulphate of copper ( bluestone ) , when applied as a powder in early spring at the rate ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adjoining American Giant ammonia-bordeaux amount anthracnose applied asparagus average beets Bordeaux mixture bordeauxed belt Bulletin celery cent Cercospora check belt clover copper sulphate corrosive sublimate cosmos plants cucumber cupram difference disease Early Rose egg-plants Experiment Area Experiment Station favor field Figure foliage four fruit rot fungi fungicides gallons Gas-lime green ground grown half harvested hydrate inches infested irrigated belt July June Kainit land leaf blight less lima beans lime lower manure mixture mulched Number of plants onions ornamental plants ounces peas peppers Plot IV pods potash potash-bordeaux pounds clean pounds marked pounds per acre present season results were obtained roots rows rust scabbed potatoes Scabby second crop seed shaded shows smut soaked soda soda-bordeaux soil rot sown spores sprayed belts sprayed with Bordeaux Stand stem Sub-irrigation sulphur sweet potatoes tomatoes Total treated turnips unsprayed plants varieties vines weeds Weight yield
Popular passages
Page 429 - Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island...
Page 294 - Burpee in 1890, and Barteldes in 1892 or 1893. The variety which is now called the Henderson was picked up twenty or more years ago by a negro, who found it growing along a roadside in Virginia. It was afterwards grown in various gardens, and about 1885 it fell into the hands of a seedsman in Richmond. Henderson purchased the stock of it in 1887, grew it in 1888, and offered it to the general public in 1889.
Page 385 - No. 1. No. 4. No. 7. No. 2. No. 5. No. 8. No. 3. No. 6.
Page 365 - Jessup and Mr. William Schmierer, Cinnaminson, NJ The plan of the experiment was to apply sulphur in the row before setting the plants, in amounts ranging from 50 pounds to as high as 400 pounds per acre. The plots were four rows wide and sixteen rods long, each plot representing onetenth of an acre.
Page 362 - The plan upon page 847 gives not only the treatment each plot received, but the yield of crop for each season during the whole time covered by the experiments. It will be noted that there were six series as numbered upon the left hand, three of which received fertilizers, namely, lime, manure and kainit, and three others alternating with these had chemicals added, namely, sulphur, corrosive sublimate and sulphate of copper, one or more of which it was hoped might check the soil-rot. The plots were...
Page 379 - ... ruined the crop. The good effects of irrigation with turnips may be expected in land free from the club-root. Irrigation for celery gave satisfactory results, considering the unfavorable soil and situation for growing this crop. In round numbers the crop was increased to two and one-half times that upon belts not receiving the water. In marketable product in pounds the difference was three to one, and in marketable value about eight to one in favor of irrigation.
Page 408 - Instead of the healthy green color there is a brown hue, as if insects had sapped the plants or frost destroyed their vitality. Rusted plants, when viewed closely, are found to have the skin of the stems...
Page 427 - At the close of his experiments Siemens was very sanguine that the electric light can be profitably employed in horticulture, and he used the term "electro horticulture" to designate this new application of electric energy. He anticipated that in the future "the horticulturist will have the means of making himself practically independent of solar light for producing a high quality of fruit at all seasons of the year.
Page 377 - ... a few early blossoms are infected, the insects will scatter the disease from flower to flower and from tree to tree until it becomes an epidemic in the orchard. We shall see later how the first blossoms are infected. From the blossoms the disease may extend downward into the branches or run in from lateral fruit spurs so as to do a large amount of damage by girdling the limbs. Another way in which the blight gains entrance is through the tips of growing shoots. In the nursery, when trees are...
Page 378 - In these cases the blight usually continues through the winter. The germs keep alive along the advancing margin of the blighted area, and although their development is very slow, it is continuous. Probably the individual microbes live longer in winter. At any rate, the infected bark retains its moisture longer, and generally the dead bark contains living microbes during a much longer period than it does in summer. It has already been found that this microbe stands the cold well. Even when grown...