![]() (1963) Laboratory results regarding potato blight and their significance in the epidemiology of blight. (1934) Studies in the Biology of Phytophthora infestans (Mont) de Bary, Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station, Ithaca, NY, 40 pp.ĭe Weille, G.A. (1960) Potato Late Blight Epidemics Throughout the World, US Government Printing Office, Washington DC, 230 pp.Ĭrosier, W. ![]() Journal of Production Agriculture, 4, 453 – 460.Ĭox, A.E. (1991) An integrated systems approach to potato crop management. European Journal of Plant Pathology, 101, 441 – 456.Ĭonnell, T.R., Koenig, J.P., Stevenson, W.R. (1995) Components of resistance to late blight (Phytophthora infestans) in eight South American Solanum species. (1990) Introduction to Plant Disease Epidemiology, John Wiley & Sons, New York City, 532 pp.Ĭolon, L.T., Budding, D.J., Paul Keizer, L.C. (1981) Analysis of potato late blight epidemiology via simulation modeling. (1993) ‘The Visitation of God’? The potato and the great Irish famine, Lilliput Press, Dublin, Ireland, 230 pp.īourke, P.M.A. (1985) A general model for disease progress with functions for variable latency and lesion expansion on growing host plants. (1983) Survival of detached sporangia of Peronospora destructor and Peronospora tabicina. Agricultural and Forestry Meteorology, 38, 263 – 288.īashi, E. (1986) A framework for examining inter-regional aerial transport of fungal spores. Plant Pathology, 45, 1027 – 1035.Īnonymous (1996) Late Blight: a Global Initiative, Centro Internacional de la Papa, Lima, Peru.Īylor, D.E. (1996) The origin of Phytophthora infestans populations present in Europe in the 1840s: a critical review of the historical and scientific evidence. (1995) Biology, ecology, and epidemiology of the potato late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans in soil. (1995) Historical and scientific evidence that supports the modern theory of the Peruvian Andes as the centre of origin of Phytophthora infestans, in Phytophthora infestans 150, (eds L.J. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.Ībad, Z.G., Abad, J.A. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. Inoculation experiments by de Bary provided evidence for the causal role of this pathogen in the disease and contributed to the later acceptance of Pasteur’s more general germ theory of disease. However, the impact of these studies had a much broader impact. The enormity of the famine initiated by this plant disease stimulated much investigation on plant diseases and led to the development of plant pathology as a distinct discipline. Devastation caused by this plant pathogen in the late 1840s in Europe led to food shortages throughout Europe and gave rise to the Irish potato famine. Potato late blight caused by the oomycete Phytophthora infestans (Mont.) de Bary may be the best known, longest studied and still among the most destructive of all plant diseases.
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