CONTROL OF PLANT DISEASES As plant pathologists, we don't study morphology, life cycles, and spread of pathogens because it's so interesting; instead,
Graduate Student Opportunities Plant Protection J. Bond A. Fakhoury Plant Pathology S. Kantartzi M. Schmidt Plant Breeding B. Young Weed Science Soybean/Corn.
Jeopardy Aquatic Species PlantsAnimalsFactsPot Luck Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Topping. Question 1 Why do plants have leaves? As a store for seed production.
Provide food for growing population. 1950s, easy control of insect pests Environmental harm Beluga whale carcass classified as hazardous waste.
MODULE 8 Control. Module Objectives Know what control is and how it differs from eradication Recognise the requirements that must be met if control objectives.
Emergency Forage Trial Central Sands Area Adams County 2005 & 2006 & 2007 Keith Vander Velde, UW Extension Marquette County Craig Saxe, UW Extension Juneau.
Weed Control Topic 2044 Mr. Christensen. Typical Michigan Weed Seed Production Weed seeds/plant weed density crop Velvetleaf 400-1,500 90 corn Giant foxtail.
Plant Diseases A disease is defined as any type of injurious abnormality A pathogen is any biological agent that causes an injurious abnormality.
Principles of Disease Control Chapter 5. OBJECTIVES Clarify principles of disease control.
BIOLOGY 2250 MICROBIAL GROWTH and ITS CONTROL. BIOLOGY 2250 PART 1. MICROBIAL GROWTH.