2012
DOI: 10.1890/0012-9623-93.4.303
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History of Ecological Sciences, Part 44: Phytopathology during the 1800s

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(91 reference statements)
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“…European botanists and publications led the way. Phytopathology during the 1800s is discussed in part 44 (Egerton 2012) and omitted here. For phytopathology during the early 1900s, see G.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…European botanists and publications led the way. Phytopathology during the 1800s is discussed in part 44 (Egerton 2012) and omitted here. For phytopathology during the early 1900s, see G.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the 1800s, botanists steadily increased their knowledge of both algal and fungal species (Ainsworth 1976:26–197), and mycologist–phytopathologist H. Anton de Bary (1831–88; on him: Paracer and Ahmadjian 2000:231–233, Egerton 2012 c :314–315) in his textbook on the morphology and physiology of fungi speculated that gelatinous lichens are (de Bary 1866:291, translated in Mitchell 2002:195)
either the fully developed, fruiting condition of plants whose immature states were included until now in the algae as Nostocaceae and Chroococcaceae, or those families are typical algae that assume the form of Collema, Ephebe etc. as a result of penetration by certain parasitic ascomycetes.
…”
Section: Lichensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Natural history became a popular hobby, which benefited entomology (Barnes 1985). The establishment of land‐grant colleges in 1862 and of state agricultural experiment stations tied to those colleges in 1887 were momentous events for entomology as they were for phytopathology, discussed in part 44 (Egerton 2012 c ).…”
Section: Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mayor of St‐Rémy asked the Société d'Agriculture de l'Hérault to investigate. The society appointed a three‐man commission in July 1868 that was more successful than Prime Minister Peel's commission established in 1845 to investigate the Irish potato blight (Egerton 2012:312). This vine commission included viticultural scientist Félix Sahut and Montpellier Professor of Medicine and Pharmacy Jules‐Émile Planchon (1823–1888).…”
Section: Europementioning
confidence: 99%