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1.
Soil fumigation with methyl bromide: bromide accumulation by lettuce plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Lettuce plants grown in beds of soil previously fumigated with methyl bromide accumulated water-extractable bromide, the amount present in the tissues depending on the concentration of inorganic bromide produced in the soil by the breakdown of the fumigant. Samples of lettuce plants from commercial nursery soils fumigated with methyl bromide at rates of 1–2 lb/ 100 ft2 (49–98 g/m2) gave rise to soil bromide levels of n-6i/μg/g. The corresponding bromide concentrations in the plants ranged from i-6 to io-1 mg/g of dry tissue. The bromide concentrations in whole lettuce plants grown in pots of soil supplemented with 0–5 mg/g inorganic bromide, as potassium bromide, ranged up to 100 mg/g of dry tissue. Bromide taken up from the soil by lettuce plants was located mainly in the outer leaves. Lettuce was relatively insensitive to the presence of bromide in the soil; no phytotoxic symptoms were observed in plants growing in soils containing 5 mg/g inorganic bromide. Implications in relation to possible tolerance limits for the bromide content of lettuce plants are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Rooted carnation cuttings often developed phytotoxic symptoms when planted in soil previously fumigated with methyl bromide, and many died. Those which recovered suffered a marked check in growth and flower production was reduced. Plant injury and effects on flower yield were more severe at high rates of fumigant application, but were reduced by flooding the soil with water or by incorporating peat into the growing medium.
Plant survival and flower yield were inversely related to the concentration in soil of inorganic bromide formed by the breakdown of the fumigant. Injury to plants occasionally occurred in the presence of soil concentrations of inorganic bromide as low as 5 pglg. Flooding the soil or incorporating peat into it were beneficial because these treatments reduced the soil concentration of inorganic bromide.
Carnation plants which were grown in soil previously fumigated with methyl bromide or supplemented directly with potassium bromide accumulated bromide in their leaves, and a bromide gradient was eventually established, the concentrations decreasing from the bottom to the top of the plants.
The evidence that inorganic bromide is the cause of the injury to carnations is discussed, and the role of peat in alleviating the incidence and seventy of the injury is considered.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Soil and wheat bromide dynamics are studied in methyl bromide-fumigated plots in a Mediterranean climate. Bromide residues range between 5 to 10 ppm in the fumigated soil and they are distributed to a depth of 50–60 cm, where a compacted layer exists, in accordance with soil organic matter and moisture distribution. The total amount of bromide in soil is 5.8 gm−2 up to a depth of 1 m and it remains almost constant during the wheat growth period. The plant bromide concentration decreases throughout the development of spring wheat. The bromide distribution in the different plant organs was identical in the two years studied and it is correlated with the chloride content. Fumigation increases the phosphorus concentration in wheat and does not affect sulphur and chloride. Though the bromide concentration in the fumigated soils is high, the levels in the plants growing in it do not cause scorched areas. This may be due to antagonic Br/Cl and Br/NO3 effects.  相似文献   

4.
Three strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duch.) cultivars Rainier, Totem and Selva were grown under greenhouse conditions in a Parkhill sandy loam soil with a background DTPA-extractable Cd concentration of 0.18 mg kg-1 and a pH of 5.1. Experimental treatments included combinations of 4 Cd applications (0, 15, 30 and 60 mg Cd kg-1 soil) applied as CdSO4 and 2 soil pH values 5.1 and 6.8. Both the application of Cd and pH of the soil significantly affected plant growth, yield and Cd accumulation in plant tissue anf fruit. Although roots accumulated the highest concentrations of Cd of all plant parts investigated, increased soil Cd application reduced leaf weight more than root weight. In general, yield of strawberries was decreased by an increase in amount of soil-applied Cd, however the yield response varied among cultivars. At 60 mg Cd kg-1 soil, yield of Rainier cultivar was reduced to 17.6% of control plants. Over 90% of total Cd taken up by plants grown in Cd-treated soil accumulated in roots, regardless of the Cd level in the soil. Root Cd concentrations ranged from 2.6 mg kg-1 (control plants) to 505.7 mg kg-1 (Totem plants grown in soil at highest Cd and a soil pH 5.1) and were directly related to soil Cd concentrations. Cd translocation from roots to leaves and fruit was very limited, resulting in a maximum Cd concentration in root leaf tissue of 10.2 mg kg-1. Accumulation of Cd in fruit was found to correlate well with leaf Cd, although even at the highest amount of applied Cd, fruit Cd concentration did not exceed 700 g kg-1 of fresh weight.Contribution no. 951  相似文献   

5.
Little bluestem grass Schizachyrium scoparium ([Michx.] Nash) plants were grown under field conditions for 2 years in soils fumigated with methyl bromide and chloropicrin, or in unfumigated soil, and treated with supplemental inorganic nutrients (bases calcium and magnesium) phosphorus, nitrogen, and potassium. Most differences in measured plant responses were due to interactions between fumigation and nutrient treatments. These included biomass production, root mass per unit length (μg/cm), root lengths, flowering culm production, percent colonization, colonized root length, and spore production in rhizosphere soil. Plants generally responded to mycorrhizal fungal colonization by reducing total root length and producing thicker roots. Treatment of plants with bases appeared to profoundly affect the mycorrhizal association by reducing sporulation of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and increasing colonization. When fumigated or unfumigated soils were considered separately, base-treated plants produced more biomass than other treatments. Base-treated plants grown on unfumigated soil had more flowering culms and longer colonized root lengths than all other plants. Percent colonization by mycorrhizal fungi and colonized root length were positively correlated with phosphorus/nitrogen ratios, but the ratio was not correlated with plant biomass production. This suggests that phosphorus is not a limiting nutrient in our soil and investment in a mycorrhizal association may not result in enhanced plant growth. The base-nutrient effects may indicate a need to reevaluate earlier studies of macro nutrient effects that did not take into account the role played by calcium and magnesium in assessing fungus-host plant interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Wheat and ryegrass were grown in pots containing soil that had either been irradiated, fumigated with methyl bromide, fumigated with formaldehyde, or left untreated. All pots received a basal dressing of potassium, phosphorus and magnesium; response to nitrogen was tested by applying either 0, 0.177 or 0.354 g nitrogen per pot. Irradiation increased the growth of wheat and ryegrass; uptake of nitrogen was also increased in both crops. The amount of fertilizer nitrogen equivalent to the nitrogen supplied by seeds and soil (the “N value”) can be calculated from the efficiency of uptake of fertilizer nitrogen and used to allow for the effect on crop growth of the nitrogen released by irradiated soil. With wheat the increase in growth can be attributed solely to the extra mineral nitrogen released by irradiated soil. However, ryegrass grew a little better than would have been expected if the only effect of irradiation was to increase the release of soil nitrogen. Fumigation with methyl bromide or formaldehyde increased the growth of wheat and ryegrass not given fertilizer nitrogen. However, fumigation with methyl bromide left ionic bromide in the soil, and this depressed the growth of wheat receiving fertilizer nitrogen. Formaldehyde also left residues; these influenced soil metabolism and sometimes depressed the growth of plants given fertilizer nitrogen.  相似文献   

7.
Methyl bromide fumigation is widely used as a phytosanitary treatment. Mexican fruit fly, Anastrepha ludens (Loew) (Diptera: Tephritidae), is a quarantine pest of several fruit, including citrus (Citrus spp.), exported from Texas, Mexico, and Central America. Recently, live larvae have been found with supposedly correctly fumigated citrus fruit. This research investigates the efficacy of the previously approved U.S. Department of Agriculture-Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service treatment schedule: 40 g/m3 methyl bromide at 21-29.4 degrees C for 2 h. Tolerance ofA. ludens to methyl bromide in descending order when fumigated in grapefruit (Citrus X paradisi Macfad.) is third instar > second instar > first instar > egg. Two infestation techniques were compared: insertion into fruit of third instars reared in diet and oviposition by adult A. ludens into fruit and development to the third instar. Inserted larvae were statistically more likely to survive fumigation than oviposited larvae. When fruit were held at ambient temperature, 0.23 +/- 0.12% of larvae were still observed to be moving 4 d postfumigation. Temperatures between 21.9 and 27.2 degrees C were positively related to efficacy measured as larvae moving 24 h after fumigation, pupariation, and adult emergence. Coating grapefruit with Pearl Lustr 2-3 h before fumigation did not significantly affect the proportion of third instars moving 24 h after fumigation, pupariating, or emerging as adults. In conclusion, fumigation with 40 g/m3 methyl bromide for 2 h at fruit temperatures >26.7 degrees C is not found to be inefficacious for A. ludens. Although a few larvae may be found moving >24 h postfumigation, they do not pupariate.  相似文献   

8.
Little bluestem plants (Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash) were grown in fumigated and nonfumigated soil under manipulated levels of three inorganic nutrients: nitrogen, phosphorus, or bases (Ca + Mg). Plants grown in nonfumigated soil had significantly (P < 0.05) higher tissue levels of inorganic nutrients (Cu, Zn, Al, S, Mg, Mn, Ca, and P), smaller shoots, less total biomass, fewer flowering plants but more VAM fungal colonization than plants grown in fumigated soil that were essentially nonmycorrhizal (colonization vs. 1.2 ± 4.9%, for plants grown in nonfumigated and fumigated soil, respectively). Levels of phosphorus (14–33 μg/g) available (Bray No. 1) in the soil prior to manipulation, which are adequate for little bluestem, likely resulted in the development of an ineffectual mycorrhizal association, which in turn, caused the depressed growth of plants in nonfumigated soil. Among plants grown in nonfumigated soil, there was significant variation in VAM fungal colonization and sporulation owing to nutrient treatment. Nitrogen treatment and deionized water control had significantly lower levels of colonization than phosphorus and base treatments. However, plants in the nitrogen and base treatments had significantly more spores/100 cc of rhizosphere soil than plants grown in the deionized water control.  相似文献   

9.
Field experiments were conducted to evaluate growth promotion and induced systemic disease resistance (ISR) in cucumber mediated by plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) with and without methyl bromide soil fumigation. In both fumigated and nonfumigated plots, numbers of cucumber beetles, Acalymma vittata (F.), and the incidence of bacterial wilt disease, caused by the beetle-transmitted pathogen Erwinia tracheiphila , were significantly lower with PGPR treatment compared with the nonbacterized control. However, in PGPR-treated plots, the incidence of bacterial wilt was more than 2-fold lower in the nonfumigated treatments compared with fumigated treatments, indicating that the level of PGPR-mediated ISR was greater without methyl bromide fumigation than with methyl bromide. Cucumber plant growth at 21 days after planting was greater in fumigated plots than in nonfumigated plots; however, plant height values in the nonfumigated, PGPR treatments and the fumigated, PGPR treatments were equivalent. This suggests that PGPR treatment compensated for delayed plant growth that often occurs in nonfumigated soil. These results indicate that, in cucumber production systems, withdrawal of methyl bromide will not negatively impact PGPRmediated ISR, and also that PGPR may have potential as an alternative to methyl bromide fumigation.  相似文献   

10.
Plots in a field infested with Globodera rostochiensis and Verticillium dahliae were treated in 1971 with methyl bromide, dazomet, aldicarb, benomyl or aldicarb + benomyl and potatoes (cv. Pentland Dell) were grown in four consecutive years. In 1971, all treatments delayed the development of haulm symptoms, decreased soil populations of G. rostochiensis and increased yields. In the second year yields were increased by all treatments except dazomet whereas in the third and fourth years only benomyl or aldicarb + benomyl increased yields. Soil populations of V. dahliae were decreased by methyl bromide in 1971 but not by other treatments or in later years. In 1976, Pentland Dell and Pentland Crown were grown on an infested field in plots fumigated with methyl bromide. Fumigation slightly delayed shoot emergence but increased plant height, ground cover and the size and persistence of the leaves; development of haulm symptoms was delayed and yield increased. Fumigating with methyl bromide at five times the normal rate was more beneficial to Pentland Dell than to Pentland Crown. In a comparison of 10 cultivars in 1975, symptoms developed sooner and yields were smaller on a field infested with G. rostochiensis and V. dahliae than on a non-infested field and on both sites Maris Peer plants died soonest and yielded least. Pentland Crown yielded most on the non-infested field and Maris Piper on the infested field.  相似文献   

11.
The growth of Aneurolepidium chinense Kitag. grown on different saline soil of a Northeast grassland of China was studied and the K+,Na+proline and citric acid accumulated in plants or their organs were determined . The results showed that A. chinense had a strong adaptability to saline habitat and could grow on soil with a salt content of 0. 088%--1.63%,and pH ranging from 8.3 to 9.8. Sodium,proline and citric acid were accumulated by plants for osmotic adjustment when the salinity and Na+content of the soil increased. A. chinense absorbed Na+ rapidly from the soil and excluded K+ when the soil Na+ concentration was less than 20 μmol/g. Sodium was adsorbed slowly and K+ remained constant in plants when Na+ concentrations of soil were 20–80 μmol/g,and proline and citric acid contents were markedly increased. Sodium and K+ decreased slightly in plant tissue and organic solutes increased when Na+ concentrations exceeded 80 μmol/g in soil. Most K+ was distributed in young leaves which were metabolically active. The major sites of Na+ accumulation were in the roots and older mature leaves;whereas proline and citric acid accumulation occurred primarily in young leaves,mature leaves and stems. Tillering buds had strong ability to absord and accumulate K+,Na+ and Proline.  相似文献   

12.
Pre-plant soil fumigation with methyl bromide and host resistance were compared for managing the southern root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) in pepper. Three pepper cultivars (Carolina Cayenne, Keystone Resistant Giant, and California Wonder) that differed in resistance to M. incognita were grown in field plots that had been fumigated with methyl bromide (98% CH₃Br : 2% CCl₃NO₂ [w/w]) before planting or left untreated. Carolina Cayenne is a well-adapted cayenne-type pepper that is highly resistant to M. incognita. The bell-type peppers Keystone Resistant Giant and California Wonder are intermediate to susceptible and susceptible, respectively. None of the cultivars exhibited root galling in the methyl bromide fumigated plots and nematode reproduction was minimal (<250 eggs/g fresh root), indicating that the fumigation treatment was highly effective in controlling M. incognita. Root galling of Carolina Cayenne and nematode reproduction were minimal, and fruit yields were not reduced in the untreated plots. The root-galling reaction for Keystone Resistant Giant was intermediate (gall index = 2.9, on a scale of 1 to 5), and nematode reproduction was moderately high. However, yields of Keystone Resistant Giant were not reduced in untreated plots. Root galling was severe (gall index = 4.3) on susceptible California Wonder, nematode reproduction was high, and fruit yields were reduced (P ≤ 0.05) in untreated plots. The resistance exhibited by Carolina Cayenne and Keystone Resistant Giant provides an alternative to methyl bromide for reducing yield losses by southern root-knot nematodes in pepper. The high level of resistance of Carolina Cayenne also suppresses population densities of M. incognita.  相似文献   

13.
Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench. cv Jianxi) is highly resistant to Al stress and is known to be an Al-accumulator. Pot experiments were carried out in a greenhouse to investigate the accumulation of Al in leaves and seeds of buckwheat. Plants were grown for 12 weeks in a strong acid soil amended with or without CaCO3 at a rate of 1 g kg−1 soil. Old leaves accumulated as much as 10 g kg−1 Al of dry weight when the plants were grown in the acid soil, while the Al concentrations in leaves immediately adjacent to seeds, seed coats, and embryos were, on average, 4516, 41.2 and 7.7 mg kg−1, respectively. The Al concentration significantly decreased in leaves when the plants were grown in the limed soil, and the Al concentrations in leaves immediately adjacent to seeds, seed coats, and embryos were, on average, 1586, 21.3 and 3.1 mg kg−1, respectively. These results show that seeds accumulate much less Al than buckwheat leaves. The underlying mechanisms are discussed. Section Editor: H. Lambers  相似文献   

14.
Laboratory investigations were made into the effect of cultivar type, prior cold storage, fumigation temperature and methyl bromide concentration, on the efficacy of a fumigation treatment to control Liriomyza trifolii in chrysanthemum cuttings. The tests related to the standard quarantine treatment used in the UK to control Spodoptera littoralis on imported chrysanthemum cuttings: cold storage for 2 days at 1 – 2°C followed by methyl bromide fumigation at 15°C with a concentration time product (CTP) of 54 g h/m3. L. trifolii larvae, within detached leaves, and 1 – 2 and 2 – 3 day old pupae, were treated. Methyl bromide concentrations of 6·75 or 13·5 g/m3 were used to achieve a range of CTPs and thus obtain accurate dose-response lines and estimates of the LD99 and LD99·9 for each insect stage. Fumigation temperatures were 8, 11 or 15°C. Efficacy of the standard treatments differed between the three cultivars tested, but the LD99 for larvae remained below 54 g h/m3. Decreasing fumigation temperature to 11°C or less increased LD99 values for larvae and pupae and substantially increased variability. There is therefore little scope for using fumigation temperatures of less than 15°C for quarantine purposes. Omitting the cold storage treatment prior to fumigation did not significantly affect efficacy of fumigation. Reducing the methyl bromide concentration from 13·5 to 6·75 g/m3 did not significantly affect the LD99 for larvae but significantly reduced LD99s for pupae.  相似文献   

15.
Can plants exposed to SO2 excrete sulfuric acid through the roots?   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Hydroponically grown pea plants (Pisum sativum L., cv. Kleine Rheinländerin) and barley seedlings (Hordeum vulgare L., cv. Gerbel) were fumigated for several days with 1 or 2 μl l?1 SO2. Both species accumulated sulfate during fumigation, although the nutrient medium lacked sulfate. In pea, SO2-dependent sulfate accumulation in different plant parts accounted for 60 percent of the SO2 sulfur which, as calculated from a determination of boundary and stomatal flux resistances had entered the leaves. Up to 55% of the air-borne sulfate was translocated from pea leaves to roots during the period of fumigation, but no or only little sulfate was excreted into the nutrient solution. In contrast, barley retained sulfate in the leaves, and sulfate translocation from shoot to the root system could not be observed. In both species, protons were excreted by the roots. In fumigated plants, proton loss was higher than in untreated controls in pea, but not in barley. In pea, SO2-dependent proton loss into the medium accounted for up to 50% of the sulfuric acid formed from SO2. Proton excretion was strongly dependent on potassium availability in the nutrient medium. Cation uptake by the plants during fumigation was sufficient to compensate for proton loss, suggesting proton/cation exchange at the interface between root and medium. We conclude that by oxidation to sulfuric acid, plants are capable of detoxifying SO2 taken up by the leaves. Depending on plant species, either both protons and sulfate anions can be exported from the leaves, or the proton load on leaf cells can be relieved by proton/cation exchange at the plasmalemma. Finally, the problem of airborne plant acidification may be solved by proton/cation exchange at the level of roots. The burden of acidification is then shifted from the plant to the nutrient medium. Appreciable amounts of sulfate can be excreted neither by pea nor by barley plants.  相似文献   

16.
Forty varieties of vegetable, cereal, fodder and grass seeds at 10, 13 and 16% moisture content were fumigated with methyl bromide at 10 and 18oC, to determine the maximum safe moisture content required to avoid unacceptable phytotoxicity. Dosages (concentration x time products) of 200 and 400 mg h/1 of technical and commercial methyl bromide were used and treated seeds were compared with controls in germination tests. Results were not consistent, but in c. 30 % of the comparisons lower moisture contents, lower temperature and lower dosage each resulted in better germination than the corresponding higher values. The reductions in germination of treated samples were usually less than 5 % and the overall average reduction was only 2.3%. This work showed that under controlled conditions the treatments are safe for most of the tested varieties of seed, but for some seeds, particularly white clovers, Agrostis and runner beans, the highest moisture content (16%) should be avoided.  相似文献   

17.
Accumulation of cadmium (Cd) in crop plants is of great concern due to the potential for food chain contamination through the soil-root interface. Although Cd uptake varies considerably with plant species, the processes which determine the accumulation of Cd in plant tissues are affected by soil factors. The influence of soil type on Cd uptake by durum wheat (Triticum turgidum var. durum L.) and flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) was studied in a pot experiment under environmentally controlled growth chamber conditions. Four cultivars/lines of durum wheat (Kyle, Sceptre, DT 627, and DT 637) and three cultivars/lines of flax (Flanders, AC Emerson, and YSED 2) were grown in two Saskatchewan soils: an Orthic Gray Luvisol (low background Cd concentration; total/ABDTPA extractable Cd: 0.12/0.03 mg kg-1, respectively) and a Dark Brown Chernozem (relatively high background Cd concentration; total/ABDTPA Cd: 0.34/0.17 mg kg-1 respectively). Plant roots, stems, newly developed heads, and grain/seeds were analyzed for Cd concentration at three stages of plant growth: two and seven weeks after germination, and at plant maturity. The results showed that Cd bioaccumulation and distribution within the plants were strongly affected by both soil type and plant cultivar/line. The Cd concentration in roots leaves and stems varied at different stages of plant growth. However, all cultivars of both plant species grown in the Chernozemic soil accumulated more Cd in grain/seeds than plants grown in the Orthic Gray Luvisol soil. The different Cd accumulation pattern also corresponded to the levels of ABDTPA extractable and metal-organic complex bound soil Cd found in both soils. Large differences were found in grain Cd among the durum wheat cultivars grown in the same soil type, suggesting the importance of rhizosphere processes in Cd bioaccumulation and/or Cd transport processes within the plant. Distribution of Cd in parts of mature plants showed that durum grain contained up to 21 and 36% of the total amount of Cd taken up by the plants for the Orthic Gray Luvisol and Chernozemic soils, respectively. These results indicate the importance of studying Cd speciation, bioaccumulation and cycling in the environment for the management of agricultural soils and crops.  相似文献   

18.
Methyl bromide applied to brassica seedbeds resulted in bromide concentrations in cabbage, cauliflower and Brussels sprout transplants of 389-4-2082-3 mg/kg fresh tissue. When the transplants were grown to maturity on untreated field plots bromide concentrations in the plants fell to levels similar to those occurring naturally. Treatment with methyl bromide of both seedbeds and field plots resulted in plant bromide concentrations in cabbage plants of 211-4 mg/kg, a level in excess of the proposed maximum residue limit of 100 mg/kg fresh matter. Bromide concentrations in the edible portions of cauliflower were between 24-8 and 96-0 mg/kg and those in Brussels sprouts between 49-3 and 121-3 mg/kg.  相似文献   

19.
Ectomycorrhizal fungi: A new source of atmospheric methyl halides?   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Incomplete source budgets for methyl halides – compounds that release inorganic chlorine and bromine radicals which, in turn, catalyze atmospheric ozone depletion – limit our ability to predict the fate of the stratospheric ozone layer. We report here the first measured emissions of methyl chloride, methyl bromide, and methyl iodide from ectomycorrhizal fungi. We grew nine fungal isolates on growth media containing halide concentrations similar to those found in soils and plant tissues. The observed range of emissions was 0.003–65 μg methyl chloride, 0.001–3 μg methyl bromide, and 0.02–12 μg methyl iodide g?1 dry weight fungi day?1. Species varied in production rates of methyl chloride vs. methyl bromide vs. methyl iodide. Cenococcum geophilum, a widespread ectomycorrhizal fungus, was further tested to investigate the effects of halide substrate concentration in growth media. Emissions from this species increased linearly with increasing concentrations of both bromide and iodide. In addition, a subset of four fungi was studied with two media concentrations each of chloride, bromide, and iodide (0.2 or 20 mm ). These fungi had similar responses to halide concentration, despite 1000‐fold differences in baseline emission rates between isolates. Finally, high chloride concentrations (20 mm ) in media did not appear to inhibit emissions of methyl bromide or methyl iodide. Overall, ectomycorrhizal fungi might be an important source of methyl halides to the atmosphere, and substrate concentrations and community composition may influence production levels in ecosystems.  相似文献   

20.
Potatoes were grown in soil infested with Verticillium dahliae and Heterodera rostochiensis and treated with methyl bromide, aldicarb or benomyl. Successive crops were grown in subsequent years on the same plots but without further treatment. Largest yields in the year of treatment were from plots fumigated with methyl bromide but in the second crop benomyl-treated plots yielded most. Neither methyl bromide nor aldicarb affected yields from trie third crop. After lifting the first crop, soil from plots treated with methyl bromide or benomyl contained less V. dahliae than that from plots receiving aldicarb or nothing. Soil was also less infective after the second crop following methyl bromide fumigation, but not the third. Plots treated with methyl bromide or aldicarb contained many fewer H. rostochiensis than untreated plots after the first crop, slightly less after the second and equal numbers after the third crop. H. rostochiensis were also fewer in benomyl-treated plots than in untreated after the first crop, but, surprisingly, were fewest after the second crop. The increased yield after applying benomyl to soil seems to depend more on its effect on H. rostochiensis than on V. dahliae. Fumigating with methyl bromide decreased common scab and black scurf on progeny tubers but increased infections by Oospora pustulans.  相似文献   

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