Annual Report [with Accompanying Documents]., Volume 2, Part 1 |
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Page 5
... apple : the grain aphid , the green aphid , and the rosy aphid . They all pass the winter in the form of black ... apple Apple maggot maggots make brown-. FIG . 193.- Alfalfa leaf spot FIG . 194. Apple aphids clustering on opening buds ...
... apple : the grain aphid , the green aphid , and the rosy aphid . They all pass the winter in the form of black ... apple Apple maggot maggots make brown-. FIG . 193.- Alfalfa leaf spot FIG . 194. Apple aphids clustering on opening buds ...
Page 6
... apple redbugs are - Apple redbug small , bright red , suck- ing bugs , which appear on the trees and puncture the newly set fruit , causing the apples either to fall or , if they mature , to be knotty , as shown in Fig . 195 . ?? The ...
... apple redbugs are - Apple redbug small , bright red , suck- ing bugs , which appear on the trees and puncture the newly set fruit , causing the apples either to fall or , if they mature , to be knotty , as shown in Fig . 195 . ?? The ...
Page 7
... apples . The eggs are laid by the small moth on the leaves and skin of the fruit . Most of the caterpillars enter the apple at the blossom end . When the petals fall the calyx is open ( Fig . 198 ) , and this is the time to spray . The ...
... apples . The eggs are laid by the small moth on the leaves and skin of the fruit . Most of the caterpillars enter the apple at the blossom end . When the petals fall the calyx is open ( Fig . 198 ) , and this is the time to spray . The ...
Page 8
... apples . They attack pears also . The insects pass the winter in the egg stage . The eggs are deposited in flat masses on the twigs , and covered with a varnish - like sub- stance . A large proportion of ... apple FIG . 206.-. 8 BULLETIN 283.
... apples . They attack pears also . The insects pass the winter in the egg stage . The eggs are deposited in flat masses on the twigs , and covered with a varnish - like sub- stance . A large proportion of ... apple FIG . 206.-. 8 BULLETIN 283.
Page 9
... apple trees in three forms , blossom blight , twig blight , and blight cankers on limbs and body . It is caused by bacteria which are distributed by bees , flies , and other insects , and is not controlled by spray- ing . Cutting out ...
... apple trees in three forms , blossom blight , twig blight , and blight cankers on limbs and body . It is caused by bacteria which are distributed by bees , flies , and other insects , and is not controlled by spray- ing . Cutting out ...
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Agricultural Animal Husbandry apex apices apple bacteria bark basal base beetles black rot blackish canker carbon dioxide cells cent injury chloride clasper color corms cortex and xylem coxae culture cuneus Dairy Industry disease eggs Entomology experiments Farm Management feed foliage fruit fungus fuscous genital claspers germination glucose grams grasshoppers greenish growth Hemelytra infection injury to cambium inoculated July June larvæ leaf spot leaves Left clasper length lesions lime-sulfur Lygus M.S. in Agr maltose margins milk mixture mycelium nitrate nitrogen nodule formation nutrients oats organism oxygen pale panicles Ph.D Plant Breeding Plant Pathology pounds Pronotum protein pubescence pycnidia reddish rept roots saccharose Scutellum seed seedling segment slight to cortex Soil Technology solution Southwest side species specimens Sphaeropsis Malorum spikelets spores sprayed sugar sulfate temperature tissue tree Northeast side trunk Van Duzee varieties vertex width writer yellow yellowish brown York ΙΟ
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Page 156 - LIVERMORE, Ph.D., Farm Management. ALVIN C. BEAL, Ph.D., Floriculture. MORTIER F. BARRUS, Ph.D., Plant Pathology. CLYDE H. MYERS, MS, Ph.D., Plant Breeding. GEORGE W. TAILBY, JR., BSA, Superintendent of Livestock EDWARD S. GUTHRIE, MS in Agr., Ph.D., Dairy Industry. JAMES C. BRADLEY, Ph.D., Entomology. PAUL WORK, BS, AB, Vegetable Gardening. JOHN BENTLEY, JR., BS, MF, Forestry.
Page 336 - BIZZELL. Ph.D., Soil Technology. GLENN W. HERRICK, BSA, Economic Entomology. HOWARD W. RILEY, ME, Farm Mechanics. CYRUS R.
Page 132 - Executive order, administered by the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture...
Page 256 - Plant Pathology BRISTOW ADAMS. BA, Editor. LELA G. GROSS, Assistant Editor. The regular bulletins of the Station are sent free on request to residents of New York State.
Page 290 - Livestock. EDWARD S. GUTHRIE, MS in Agr., Ph.D., Dairy Industry. JAMES C. BRADLEY, Ph.D.. Entomology. PAUL WORK. BS, AB, Vegetable Gardening. JOHN BENTLEY, JR., BS, MF, Forestry. EARL W. BENJAMIN, Ph.D., Poultry Husbandry. EMMONS W. LELAND, BSA, Soil Technology. CHARLES T. GREGORY, Ph.D.. Plant Pathology. WALTER W. FISK, MS in Agr., Dairy Industry. ARTHUR L. THOMPSON, Ph.D.. Farm Management. ROBERT MATHESON, Ph.D., Entomology. MORTIMER D. LEONARD, BS, Entomology.
Page xi - It shall be the duty of each of said stations, annually, on or before the first day of February, to make to the Governor of the State or Territory in which it is located a full and detailed report of its operations, including a statement of receipts and expenditures, a copy of which report shall be sent to each of said stations, to the said Commissioner of Agriculture, and to the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States.
Page 510 - HENRY H. WING, MS in Agr., Animal Husbandry. T. LYTTLETON LYON, Ph.D., Soil Technology. JOHN L. STONE, B.Agr., Farm Practice. JAMES E. RICE, BSA, Poultry Husbandry. GEORGE W. CAVANAUGH, BS, Agricultural Chemistry. HERBERT H. WHETZEL, MA, Plant Pathology. ELMER O. PIPPIN, BSA, Soil Technology.
Page 430 - MORTIMER D. LEONARD, BS, Entomology. FRANK E. RICE, Ph.D., Agricultural Chemistry. VERN B. STEWART, Ph.D., Plant Pathology. IVAN C. JAGGER, MS in Agr., Plant Pathology (In cooperation with Rochester University).
Page 22 - Pear psylla sucking insects, which are often found working in the axils of the leaves and in the fruit early in the season. They develop into minute, cicada-like, jumping lice. The young psyllas secrete a large quantity of honeydew, in which a peculiar black fungus grows, giving the bark a characteristic sooty appearance. There may be four broods annually and the trees are often seriously injured. The trees should be sprayed for the adult psyllas, in a warm spell in December or March, with " black...
Page 543 - Analyses and Valuations of Complete Fertilizers, Ground Bone and Miscellaneous Samples of other Fertilizing Materials.