Seed Treatment Seed used in transplant production should be certified ‘clean’ or disease-free. Most commercial seed comes with certification and is pretreated with fungicide. Important diseases such as Bacterial leaf spot of tomato and pepper can cause major problems in transplant production if introduced in the greenhouse, especially if untreated seed is infested. Remember, a […]
Continue reading...Greenhouse Disease Management: Seed Treatments and Transplant Production
Rutgers downy mildew resistant sweet basils available around the world; Research efforts continue
Rutgers downy mildew resistant sweet basils available around the world; Research efforts continue After a decade’s worth of research and breeding efforts Rutgers Downy Mildew Resistant (DMR) sweet basils are now available to commercial and organic growers as well as home gardeners around the world. Since 2007, when basil downy mildew (BDM) was first identified […]
Continue reading...Controlling Cercospora leaf spot in beet
Cercospora leaf spot (CLS), caused by Cercospora beticola, is an important and emerging disease in beet and swiss chard production in New Jersey. Efforts to control this disease has become more difficult in the past few years in some areas of southern New Jersey. The soil-borne fungal pathogen, once established in fields, can survive in […]
Continue reading...Copper resistance in bacterial leaf spot found in New Jersey during 2020 growing season
Copper resistance has been detected in bacterial leaf spot of tomato and pepper and in Pseudomonas chicorii, the causal agent of bacterial leaf spot in basil, in New Jersey. While not surprising, copper resistance has been known to develop for decades now; however, this is the first time it has been confirmed in vegetable crops […]
Continue reading...Understanding and Controlling Tomato Brown Rugose Fruit Virus
Tomato Brown Rugose Fruit Virus (ToBRFV) is an emerging virus in greenhouse tomato production worldwide. The virus was first identified in Israel a few years ago and has since been found in Europe, Asia, Mexico, and the US. The pathogen is known to be present in greenhouse tomatoes in Mexico, and has occasionally been found […]
Continue reading...American Cranberry Growers Association Winter Meeting
Date: Thursday, January 23, 2020 Location: Rutgers EcoComplex, Bordentown, NJ Agenda 8:00-8:30 Registration and Coffee 8:30-8:50 Welcoming remarks– Shawn Cutts, President, ACGA Treasurer’s report – Shawn Cutts 8:50-9:10 Cranberry statistics Bruce Eklund, National Agricultural Statistics Service, Trenton, NJ 9:10-9:35 Traits we have found in cranberry Nicholi Vorsa, Professor, Department of Plant Biology, Rutgers University; Jennifer […]
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