pine blister rustの例文
- White pine blister rust was found to have a negligible effect on the population.
- White pine blister rust, wheatstem rust, and coffee rust are examples of notoriously damaging, economically important rusts.
- White pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ) needs two alternate hosts to complete its lifecycle.
- In North America, there is a need for this fruit to have resistance to white pine blister rust.
- As an alternative, new strains of commercial currants have been developed which are highly resistant to white pine blister rust.
- In particular the plant is resistant to American gooseberry mildew, blackcurrant leaf spot, white pine blister rust, and big bud gall mite.
- An introduced fungal disease known as white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ) is believed to affect some individuals.
- The Rocky Mountain population is severely threatened by an introduced fungal disease known as white pine blister rust, and by pine beetles.
- Like other European and Asian white pines, Macedonian pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ).
- Like other European and Asian white pines, Swiss pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ).
- Like other European and Asian white pines, Siberian pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ).
- For much of the century the federal government banned growing currants in some areas because they could harbor pine blister rust, a serious disease.
- However, the whitebark pine has been in decline due to White Pine Blister Rust : whitebark pine mortality in some areas exceeds 90 %.
- In the early 1900s, the federal government banned gooseberries and currants because they are the hosts to white pine blister rust, a devastating disease.
- The white pine weevil ( " white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ), an introduced fungus, can damage or kill these trees.
- This plant is an alternate host for the white pine blister rust ( " Cronartium ribicola " ), the vector of a pine tree disease.
- White pine blister rust, a fungal disease that infects conifer trees, was accidentally introduced in British Columbia in 1910 and had reached California by the 1920s.
- For example, the repeating stage in "'white pine blister rust disease "'does not occur on white pines but on the alternate host, " Ribes spp ."
- The better news is that breeders have developed several varieties that are immune to white-pine blister rust, just in case you're still worried about infecting any nearby white pines.
- Members of the Ribes family can serve as alternate hosts for white pine blister rust, a fatal disease of some pines, so they are banned in parts of the United States.