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A note on the production of premature sprouting in the potato, and its application to the study of virus diseases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

Redcliffe N. Salaman
Affiliation:
School of Agriculture, Cambridge University.

Extract

Workers on Virus Diseases of the Potato labour under a disadvantage inasmuch as they are frequently confronted with the difficulty of obtaining positive results of infection in one and the same season. Moreover, tubers resulting from a plant which has been artificially infected in one season, retain the secret of the success or otherwise of the operation until adult plants have been grown from them in the succeeding year. Any method which will sensibly curtail this long waiting period is welcome. As long ago as 1788, Joseph Webb, writing on “Curl” in potatoes, recommended that a sample of the seed-tubers intended for planting in the following season should be planted in a hot-bed before Christmas, and that if 2 per cent, or more of the plants exhibited Curl, the stock should be destroyed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1927

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References

page 524 note 1 Webb, , Joseph, (1788). Bath Papers, Vol. 3, p. 306.Google Scholar

page 524 note 2 Denny, P. B. (1926). Effect of Thiourea upon bud inhibition, etc. Contributions from Boyce Thompson Institute, Vol. 1, No. 3, p. 154.Google Scholar Second report on the use of Chemicals for hastening the sprouting of dormant Potato Tubers. Vol. 1, p. 169.

page 524 note 3 Appleman, C. (1914). Study of Rest Period in Potato Tubers. Maryland Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 183Google Scholar