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VegEdge: Grape Flea Beetle.

62599 VegEdge: Grape Flea Beetle. http://www.vegedge.umn.edu/vegpest/grapes/FleaBeetle.htm Grape flea beetle (Altica spp.) feeds on buds of several species of wild and commercial grapes (Vitis spp.) during early spring. The species of flea beetles that may cause economic losses in commercial grapes in the United States and Canada include Altica chalybea Illiger and A. Horticulture > Fruits > Grape > Science flea   beetle   beetles   pest   management   wooded   areas   northeastern   north   america   extension   service   overwintering   lay   eggs Jan 1, 2007  

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Muscadines are vigorous, deciduous vines growing 60-100 ft. in the wild. Botanically, they differ in significant ways from other grapes and are placed in a separate sub-genus, Muscadinia.
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Cause: Uncinula necator, a a fungal disease common to all areas of the PNW. The disease tends to be more severe on the westside of the Cascades but is a chronic problem in arid districts where over-the-canopy irrigation is used for early-season frost protection or watering.
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Weihman & Liburd: Control of Grape Root Borer 245 MATING DISRUPTION AND ATTRACT-AND-KILL AS REDUCED-RISK STRATEGIES FOR CONTROL OF GRAPE ROOT BORER VITACEA POLISTIFORMIS (LEPIDOPTERA: SESIIDAE) IN FLORIDA VINEYARDS SCOTT W. WEIHMAN AND OSCAR E.
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Submitted to: Agricultural Research Service Publication Publication Type: Germplasm Release Publication Acceptance Date: July 13, 2005 Publication Date: July 21, 2005 Citation: Ramming, D.W. 2005. Notice to fruit growers and nurserymen of the release of Scarlet Royal grape.
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The NSF Plant Genome Program has awarded a grant to Dr. Grant Cramer of the University of Nevada-Reno? entitled "Integrative Functional Genomic Resource Development in Vitis vinifera: Abiotic Stress and Wine Quality".
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The crown gall pathogen survives systemically within the grapevine and causes disease at wounded areas on the vine (Lehoczky, 1968). There are both tumorigenic and nontumorigenic strains of A. vitis found on grape (Burr et al, 1998).
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The genus Vitis, grapes (Family Vitaceae), can commonly be found in temperate deciduous forests of eastern North America. This liana here occurs in eastern Michigan.
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History of Grape Growing in the Eastern United States By Fred Elmer Gladwin 1931 Reproduced in 2007 fromthe original work whichwas publishedin elevenparts in Rural New Yorker in 1931. Fred Elmer Gladwin (1877-1940) was a well regarded expert in viticulture.
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Grapes are one of the oldest cultivated plants. They are classified as true berries because the fruit wall or pericarp is fleshy all the way through. The cultivation of grapes dates back more than 5,000 years in Egypt, and they were highly developed by the Greeks and Romans.
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