Listing 1 - 10 from 53 for slightly sunken
Blackleg and Bacterial Soft Rot
... noticeable on the underground portion of the stem. Tubers may be slightly discoloured at point of attachment to the main portion of ... appears as slightly sunken, tan to brown, circular water soaked areas (about 5 mm in diameter). Under dry conditions, there may be sunken areas that are dry and hard. Soft rotted potato flesh appears wet, cream to tan in colour with a soft, slightly ...
gardenline.usask.ca
Sinopteridaceae [First Draft]
... ovate-deltate, 3—4 X 1.5—2 cm, 3-4-pinnate, herbaceous; hydathodes spindle, slightly sunken below leaf surface. Fertile leaf blade ovate or ovate-oblong, 4—6 X 1.5 ... , pinnatifid, with 5—7 pairs of lanceolate to deltate segments, other pinnules lanceolate or linear, slightly lobed or entire. Veins evident abaxially. False indusia continuous, brown, membranous, margins irregularly dentate. Sori ...
hua.huh.harvard.edu
TAENITIDACEAE [First Draft]
... 40--70 cm long, adaxially grooved, castaneous at base, stramineous or brown upwards, glabrous. Lamina slightly dimorphic, 20--40 X 20--30 cm, 1-pinnate with 3--8 pairs lateral pinnae ... , 13--25 X 1.2--3 cm; costae distinctly raised on abaxial surface, flat or slightly sunken on adaxial surface. Veins well reticulate without included veinlets. Sori linear and forming a narrow ...
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Bacterial Spot of Stone Fruits, HYG-3019-95
... develop on young twigs produced the previous summer. Spring cankers first appear as water-soaked, slightly darkened blisters about the time the first leaves appear. If these cankers encircle the ... water-soaked, dark purplish spots. In time, they enlarge, turn brown to purple-black, become slightly sunken, and are round to elliptical with water-soaked margins. On certain plum and apricot varieties ...
ohioline.osu.edu
Anthracnose of Grape
... as numerous small, circular, and reddish spots. Spots then enlarge, become sunken, and produce lesions with gray centers and round or angular edges ... may coalesce, causing a blighting or killing of the shoot. A slightly raised area may form around the edge of the lesion. Infected ... to an average diameter of 1/4 inch and may become slightly sunken. The centers of the spots turn whitish gray and are ...
ohioline.osu.edu More from this site
Vegetable Crops - pt 6
... one-fourth inch in diameter. Centers of these lesions become irregular, light brown and slightly sunken with a rough, scabby surface. Ripe fruits are not susceptible to the disease. ... as for early blight. Anthracnose (fungi - Colletotrichum sp.): At first, infected fruit show small, slightly sunken, watersoaked spots. These spots enlarge, become darker in color, depressed and have concentric rings. ...
plantpathology.tamu.edu
Fruit5
... purple margins with brown centers. Fruit spots are one-fourth inch in diameter, black, and slightly depressed. They sometimes coalesce to cover a large portion of the fruit surface. Lesions also ... slightly to the sides. This results in a long, narrow canker. Cankers develop during the fall and winter but are not visible until late winter and early spring. Damaged areas are slightly sunken ...
plantpathology.tamu.edu More from this site
FPHG -
... -diameter lesion next to or including part of the calyx. Usually brown, the spot is slightly sunken and often has a red border. A dry or corky shallow rot develops in the ...
ssfruit.cas.psu.edu
FPHG -
... common leaf spots occur on the veins, midribs, and petioles (leaf stems) as long, narrow, slightly sunken, light-colored lesions. These contain several dark dots--the fruiting structures (pycnidia) of the fungus ...
ssfruit.cas.psu.edu More from this site
Quince growing
... drained situations. Quinces are particularly susceptible to iron deficiency under alkaline conditions; hence they prefer slightly acid soils. Site There are four important factors to be taken into account: 1. ... brown spots develop on the skin of the fruit, which enlarge and become black and slightly sunken. With heavy infections, spots may join to form large, irregular areas, which cause fruit to ...
www.agric.nsw.gov.au