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  1. Bacterial Diseases of Plants

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-gen-6

    disease including the reasons why plants get sick and how to control or manage healthy plants. Although ... Pathogenic bacteria, on the other hand, cause severe and often fatal diseases in humans, animals and plants. ... The first bacterial disease ever discovered was anthrax (caused by Bacillus anthracis) of cattle and ...

  2. Biosecurity for Youth Livestock Exhibitors

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/vme-7

    production, biosecurity refers to those measures taken to keep disease agents out of populations, herds, or ... States attempts to keep highly pathogenic avian influenza, as well as other diseases such as ... foot-and-mouth disease (FMD), out of its animal population. In addition to national concerns, individual states ...

  3. Blueberry Leaf Rust

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-fru-43

    Tsuga  (hemlock, spruce), and Rhododendron (azalea, rhododendron). The disease has been reported in Asia, ... disease is sporadic and localized. Leaf rust can cause premature defoliation of affected bushes. Over ... time, and if not properly managed, bushes slowly decline and produce fewer marketable berries. Disease ...

  4. Sclerotinia Stem Rot (White Mold) of Soybean

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-soy-3

    Sclerotinia stem rot, or white mold, of soybean is a disease most commonly reported in high-yield soybeans in ... the North Central Region of the United States. Overall disease incidence and severity vary from year ... to year and from field to field. In Ohio, growers have faced localized outbreaks of this disease ...

  5. Gluten-Free Eating: Important Considerations

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/hyg-5589

    allergy, Celiac disease and non-Celiac gluten sensitivity. Wheat allergy Wheat allergy is an overreaction ... Wheat allergy occurs in about 0.4 percent of the U.S. population. Celiac disease Celiac disease is ... This digestive disease can cause serious complications, including malnutrition, if left untreated. ...

  6. Jason C. Slot

    https://plantpath.osu.edu/our-people/jason-c-slot

    Ewing, C. J., Hausman, C. E., Pogacnik, J., Slot, J., & Bonello, P. (2018). Beech leaf disease: An ... for nutrient acquisition, and many rely upon them for defense against disease and stress. ...

  7. Apple Powdery Mildew

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-fru-21

    cover the entire leaf. Diseased leaves become narrow, crinkled, stunted and brittle. By mid-summer, ... fungal fruiting bodies, but their importance in the disease cycle is probably minimal. The fungus spreads ... Leaves and blossoms from infected buds will be diseased when they open the next spring. Infected blossoms ...

  8. Common Rust of Corn

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-cer-02

    diseases of corn in the U.S., but it rarely causes significant yield losses in Ohio field (dent) corn. ... or sweet corn, yield losses may occur when the leaves at and above the ears become severely diseased ... after tasseling. These can be easily recognized and distinguished from other diseases by the development ...

  9. Spur Blight of Red Raspberries

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-fru-28

    raspberries. Spur blight has been considered to be a serious disease of red raspberry; however, recent studies ... bearing side branches. In addition, berries produced on diseased canes may be dry, small, and seedy. ... body (perithecia). Leaflets sometimes become infected and show brown, wedge-shaped diseased areas, with ...

  10. Fungal and Fungal-like Diseases of Plants

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-gen-7

    disease including the reasons why plants get sick and how to control or manage healthy plants. ... Collectively, fungi and fungal-like organisms (FLOs) cause more plant diseases than any other group of plant ... pest with over 8,000 species shown to cause disease. FLOs are organisms like Pythium and Phytophthora ...

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