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Notes on the Hop Mildew (Sphaerotheca humuli (DC.) Burr.1)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

E. S. Salmon
Affiliation:
Mycologist to the South-Eastern Agricultural College, Wye, Kent.

Extract

It is only quite recently that the perithecium, ascocarp or sporocarp, as it has been variously called, of the Erysiphaceae has been shown to possess a regular dehiscence accompanied by the ejection of the ascospores. We find the fact first recorded, I believe, by Worthington G. Smith, in 1884. In 1903 I independently observed the phenomenon in the same species, viz. Erysiphe Graminis DC., which Smith had studied. Smith's observations seem to have been entirely overlooked until attention was called to them in my paper in 1903, and up to this date the perithecium of the Erysiphaceae is described in nearly all text-books as a cleistothedum or cleistocarp, since it was supposed to remain closed until it decayed and ruptured to permit of the escape of the ascospores.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1907

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References

page 327 note 2 Diseases of Field and Garden Crops, p. 133, 1884.

page 327 note 3 Journal of Botany, p. 161, 1903.

page 332 note 1 The New Phytologist, III. p. 111, 1904.Google Scholar

page 332 note 2 See e.g. Percival, Agric. Botany, p. 732, 1902; Journ. Bath and West of England Soc. XV. p. 78;Google ScholarMyrick, , The Hop, p. 152 (1899).Google Scholar

page 332 note 3 See Salmon, E. S., “Recent Researches on the Specialisation of Parasitism in the Erysiphaceae,” The New Phytologist, III. p. 55, 1904; l.c. p. 109, where a bibliography of the subject is given.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

page 332 note 4 See Salmon, E. S., Monograph of the Erysiphaceae, 1900, and “Supplementary Notes,” Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 1902.Google Scholar