Natural Replacement of Weed Hosts of the Beet Leafhopper as Affected by Rodents (Classic Reprint)

Natural Replacement of Weed Hosts of the Beet Leafhopper as Affected by Rodents (Classic Reprint)
Author: Robert Louis Piemeisel
Publisher: Forgotten Books
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2018-09-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781396112539

Excerpt from Natural Replacement of Weed Hosts of the Beet Leafhopper as Affected by Rodents Some apparently erratic changes, however, in the successions of vegetation that took place on areas where burning, plowing, and overgrazing were prevented were not explained. The eco logical studies as made from 1930 to 1944 on three 40-acre fenced plots and on unfenced tracts in southern Idaho now indicate that such variable behavior was due to destruction of vegetation by native animals, chiefly jack rabbits. These observations, reported and interpreted in this circular, demonstrate that in addition to burning, plowing, and excessive grazing, the feeding by rodents is a factor that in some instances disrupts plant successions and thereby retards the natural replacement of weed hosts of the insect vector of the curly top Virus. The studies of plant successions have thus produced results that are useful as apart of the basic information needed in promoting production of sugar beets and other crops affected by curly top. They also contribute toward a better understanding of range management problems in an area subject to intermittent farming. They should aid in the development of wise land use practices - a consideration of long-time significance and increasing importance. The studies deal specifically with communities of annual plants found on the desert-dry outlying lands bordering cultivated dis tricts and on range lands that were formerly covered by the northern desert-shrub type of vegetation - sagebrush, with its associated perennial grasses, and herbaceous perennials. Al though the communities of annual plants may be different on the nearby foothills and on higher plains and valleys of southern Idaho where the plant cover formerly consisted of other types of native perennial vegetation, some of the essential results of these studies will apply to these areas also, as they have already been found applicable in somewhat similar investigations in the San Joaquin Valley, Calif. This circular deals with the data obtained and the conclusions derived from their interpretation. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.

Enhancing Biological Control

Enhancing Biological Control
Author: Charles Hammond Pickett
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 450
Release: 1998
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780520213623

Over the past ten years an increasing number of field entomologists and farmers have recognized that conservation of natural enemies is important to effective biological control in many agricultural systems. This collection addresses an important gap in the biological control literature by providing the first comprehensive summary of recent findings on habitat manipulation to control pests. Enhancing Biological Control includes contributions from experts around the world: the United States, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, People's Republic of China, and Switzerland. Chapters cover habitat modification in such areas as fields, orchards, or vineyards, and along or near the perimeters of fields, including hedges or other uncultivated areas. Generalist and specialist natural enemies are described in full, as are theoretical and practical issues. Experimental designs for studying enhancement come into play, and the editors include a modeling study that explores how the dispersal of natural enemies interacts with the positioning of refuges. This volume is an invaluable source of information to researchers, progressive farmers, and agricultural consultants.

Ecofriendly Pest Management for Food Security

Ecofriendly Pest Management for Food Security
Author: Omkar
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 764
Release: 2016-02-03
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0128032669

Ecofriendly Pest Management for Food Security explores the broad range of opportunity and challenges afforded by Integrated Pest Management systems. The book focuses on the insect resistance that has developed as a result of pest control chemicals, and how new methods of environmentally complementary pest control can be used to suppress harmful organisms while protecting the soil, plants, and air around them. As the world’s population continues its rapid increase, this book addresses the production of cereals, vegetables, fruits, and other foods and their subsequent demand increase. Traditional means of food crop production face proven limitations and increasing research is turning to alternative means of crop growth and protection. Addresses environmentally focused pest control with specific attention to its role in food security and sustainability. Includes a range of pest management methods, from natural enemies to biomolecules. Written by experts with extensive real-world experience.

Integrated Pest Management

Integrated Pest Management
Author: Rajinder Peshin
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 1324
Release: 2009-04-29
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9789048122257

This interdisciplinary text offers updated knowledge on pest management. It discusses dissemination and impact on a range of crops across the globe on industrialized and subsistence level farms. It also explores the effect of the green revolution on IPM.

Insect Pest Management

Insect Pest Management
Author: David Dent
Publisher: C A B International
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2000
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780851993416

This is a revised edition of an undergraduate textbook, which incorporates advances in insect pest management, and has been updated throughout to provide a more balanced, comprehensive coverage of the subject. Topics include a history of insect pest management, and a discussion of insecticides.

Beta maritima

Beta maritima
Author: enrico biancardi
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2011-12-07
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1461408415

Along the undisturbed shores, especially of the Mediterranean Sea and the European North Atlantic Ocean, is a quite widespread plant called Beta maritima by botanists, or more commonly sea beet. Nothing, for the inexperienced observer's eye, distinguishes it from surrounding wild vegetation. Despite its inconspicuous and nearly invisible flowers, the plant has had and will have invaluable economic and scientific importance. Indeed, according to Linnè, it is considered "the progenitor of the beet crops possibly born from Beta maritima in some foreign country". Recent molecular research confirmed this lineage. Selection applied after domestication has created many cultivated types with different destinations. The wild plant always has been harvested and used both for food and as a medicinal herb. Sea beet crosses easily with the cultivated types. This facilitates the transmission of genetic traits lost during domestication, which selection processes aimed only at features immediately useful to farmers and consumers may have depleted. Indeed, as with several crop wild relatives, Beta maritima has been successfully used to improve cultivated beet’s genetic resistances against many diseases and pests. In fact, sugar beet cultivation currently would be impossible in many countries without the recovery of traits preserved in the wild germplasm. Dr. Enrico Biancardi graduated from Bologna University. From 1977 until 2009, he was involved in sugar beet breeding activity by the Istituto Sperimentale per le Colture Industriali (ISCI) formerly Stazione Sperimentale di Bieticoltura (Rovigo, Italy), where he released rhizomania and cercospora resistant germplasm and collected seeds of Mediterranean sea beet populations as a genetic resource for breeding and ex situ conservation. Retired since 2009, he still collaborates with several working breeders, in particular, at the USDA Agricultural Research Stations, at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science (CAAS), and at the Athens University (AUA). He has edited books, books chapters and authored more than 150 papers. Dr. Lee Panella is a plant breeder and geneticist with the USDA-ARS at Fort Collins, Colorado. He earned his B.S. in Crop and Soil Science from Michigan State University, an M.S. in Plant Breeding from Texas A&M University, and a Ph.D. in genetics from the University of California at Davis. His research focus is developing disease resistant germplasm using sugar beet wild relatives. He is chairman of the USDA-ARS Sugar Beet Crop Germplasm Committee and has collected and worked extensively with sea beet. Dr. Robert T. Lewellen was raised on a ranch in Eastern Oregon and obtained a B.S. in Crop Science from Oregon State University followed by a Ph.D. from Montana State University in Genetics. From 1966 to 2008 he was a research geneticist for the USDA-ARS at Salinas, California, where he studied the genetics of sugar beet and as a plant breeder, often used sea beet as a genetic source to produce many pest and disease resistant sugar beet germplasm and parental lines, while authoring more than 100 publications.

Introduction to Plant Diseases

Introduction to Plant Diseases
Author: George B. Lucas
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 374
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1461572940

Every year we see a remarkable increase in scientific knowledge. We are learning more each day about the world around us, about the numerous biological organisms of the biosphere, about the physical and chemical processes that shaped and continue to change our planet. The cataloging, retrieval, dissemination, and use of this new information along with the continued development of new computer technology provide some of the most challenging problems in science as we enter the Information Age. With the explosion of knowledge in science, it is especially important that students in introductory courses learn not only the basic material of a subject, but also about the newest developments in that subject. With this goal in mind, we have prepared a second edition of Introduction to Plant Diseases: Identification and Management. We prepared this edition with the same general purpose that we had for the first edition - to provide practical, up-to-date information that helps in the successful management of diseases on food, fiber, and landscape plants for students who do not have a strong background in the biological sciences. We included new information on (1) the precise identification of diseases and the pathogens that cause them, (2) the development of epidemics of plant diseases, (3) the application of biotechnology in plant pathology, (4) the use of alternative methods of crop production and disease management that help protect the environment, and (5) diseases that have become more important since the first edition was published.

Virus Diseases of Trees and Shrubs

Virus Diseases of Trees and Shrubs
Author: J.I. Cooper
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 236
Release: 1993-09-30
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780412472206

This is the second edition of a widely-respected book covering all aspects of virus pathology of trees and shrubs. This new edition contains much new information and the inclusion of a colour plate section will be of great use in symptom recognition.