Soil fumigation controls sudden wilt of melon
Authors
Donald E. MunneckeJames Bricker
Franklin F. Laemmlen
Authors Affiliations
Donald E. Munnecke is Professor, Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Riverside; James Bricker is Staff Research Associate, Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Riverside; Franklin F. Laemmlen is Farm Advisor, UC Cooperative Extension, Imperial County.Publication Information
Hilgardia 38(5):8-9. DOI:10.3733/ca.v038n05p8. May 1984.
PDF of full article, Cite this article
Abstract
Fumigants control Pythium fungus infections and appreciably increase melon yields
Munnecke D, Bricker J, Laemmlen F. 1984. Soil fumigation controls sudden wilt of melon. Hilgardia 38(5):8-9. DOI:10.3733/ca.v038n05p8
Also in this issue:
Agricultural research is on trialRange fertilization in the Sierra Nevada foothills
Prune leaves of summer-planted strawberries sparingly
Evapotranspiration losses of tomatoes under drip and furrow irrigation
Climate and dormancy data reduce need for many regional alfalfa trials
Economics of pest control alternatives for Imperial Valley cotton
Sampling spider mites in almonds
Blue gum plantations analyzed for economic return
New data on the grape bud beetle
Translocation of eight C14-labeled amino acids and three herbicides in two varieties of barley