In recent years, consumer demands for more nutritious salad products have brought major changes in the types of lettuce produced and in the methods of their cultivation. These changes have also brought new challenges to disease and pest management in lettuce production.
The
Compendium of Lettuce Diseases and Pests, Second Edition, addresses these changes and challenges by providing the most up-to-date and comprehensive resource available on lettuce diseases and pests, as well as their management. It offers solutions to help users identify and manage infectious diseases caused by fungi, bacteria, nematodes, viruses, as well as noninfectious disorders such as air pollution, allelopathy, bolting, mineral deficiencies, toxicities, pesticide related injury, rib blight, tipburn, and many others.
This concise yet comprehensive book is ideal for large and small commercial growing operations, as well as the advisors that serve them, including plant pathologists, entomologists, breeders, seed company personnel, crop production specialists, growers, diagnosticians, students, regulatory personnel, crop consultants, educators, researchers, extension personnel, and others involved in the diagnosis and management of lettuce diseases, pests, and disorders.
The highly anticipated second edition, published two decades after the first, offers the most practical, up-to-date, and comprehensive information in existence for diagnosing and managing diseases, pests and disorders of various lettuce crops. The
Compendium of Lettuce Diseases and Pests, Second Edition specifically offers…
- Nearly 210 images of symptoms caused by diseases, insects, and abiotic agents, enabling growers to visually identify diseases and other pests that affect their crops.
- Data on the distribution of pathogens and pests of lettuce within the United States and the world, giving users reliable information on geographic trends.
- Concise descriptions of laboratory techniques to recover pathogens and identify insects, allowing researchers to achieve a higher degree of accuracy in diagnoses.
- Succinct descriptions of management options for growers, researchers, and extension agents.
- Information on the causal organisms, disease cycle and epidemiology of each pathogen.
- Selected references that lead readers to important and relevant literature on each pathogen and pest of lettuce, as well as related crops.
- Science-based information from top researchers across the world, enabling users to more confidently scout, identify, and manage problems in the field before they become economically significant.
The
Compendium of Lettuce Diseases and Pests, Second Edition is divided into four parts titled Infectious Diseases; Arthropod (insect) Pests; Injuries and Abiotic and Noninfectious Diseases and Disorders; and Postharvest Diseases and Disorders.
The book also offers useful information on the history of lettuce, evolution of different types of lettuce cultivation, conventional and biotechnological and genomic approaches to lettuce improvement, the food safety issues that have emerged as a major concern for the industry in recent years, and other relevant topics.
Quantity Discounts Are Available for Easy Distribution to
- Managers, field staff, contract growers, and others involved in commercial operations
- VIP clients and customers in the lettuce industry
- Colleagues in state and county extension
- Fellow researchers and diagnosticians at your institution
10-book bundle
25-book bundle
Compendium of Lettuce Diseases and Pests, Second Edition
Introduction
Lettuce Production
Cultivars
Botany, Taxonomy, and Origin
Evolution of the U.S. Lettuce Industry
Production Factors
Lettuce Breeding
Objectives of Lettuce Breeding
Methods of Lettuce Breeding
Applications of Biotechnology and Genomics to Disease Resistance in Lettuce
Tissue Culture
Molecular Markers and Genome Sequencing
Status of Molecular Markers for Resistance to Specific Diseases
Transgenic Approaches
Genome Editing
Opportunities from Model and Other Species
Metagenomics
Conclusions
Lettuce Seed Germination Under Environmental Stress
Maternal Environment During Seed Maturation
Sensitivity to Temperature and Salinity Stress
Seed Technology Enhances Germination—but at a Price
Lettuce Diseases and Disorders
Infectious Agents
Abiotic Diseases and Disorders
Management of Lettuce Diseases and Disorders
Lettuce-Associated Microbiota
Population Size, Structure, and Function of Lettuce Microbiota
Plant Species, Cultivar, Age, and Growth
Location, Climate, and Season
Impact of Pathogens and Management Practices
Conclusions and Outlook
Food Safety
Plant-Associated Foodborne Pathogens
Routes and Sources of Contamination
Environmental Survival
Factors Contributing to Pathogen Survival and Growth on Leaf Surfaces
Improving Food Safety
Part I. Infectious Diseases
Diseases Caused by Fungi and Oomycetes
Anthracnose
Black Root Rot
Black Rot
Bottom Rot
Cercospora Leaf Spot
Damping-Off
Downy Mildew
Drop
Fusarium Wilt
Gray Mold
Phoma Leaf Spot and Basal Rot
Phytophthora Stem and Root Rot
Powdery Mildew
Pythium Wilt, Leaf Blight, and Root Rot
Septoria Leaf Spot
Southern Blight
Stemphylium Leaf Spot
Texas Root Rot
Verticillium Wilt
Diseases Caused by Bacteria
Bacterial Leaf Spot
Bacterial Soft Rot
Corky Root
Marginal Leaf Blight
Varnish Spot
Diseases Caused by Phytoplasmas
Lettuce Yellows (Aster Yellows), Lettuce Phyllody, and Australian Lettuce Phyllody
Diseases Caused by Viruses
Alfalfa Mosaic
Beet Western Yellows
Beet Yellow Stunt
Bidens Mottle
Broad Bean Wilt
Cucumber Mosaic
Dandelion Yellow Mosaic
Impatiens Necrotic Spot
Lettuce Big Vein
Lettuce Chlorosis
Lettuce Dieback
Lettuce Mosaic
Lettuce Mottle
Lettuce Necrotic Yellows
Sonchus Yellow Net
Sowthistle Yellow Vein
Tobacco Rattle
Tobacco Ringspot
Tobacco Streak
Tomato Spotted Wilt
Turnip Mosaic
Minor Viruses of Lettuce
Endive necrotic mosaic virus
Lettuce necrotic leaf curl virus
Lettuce yellow mottle virus
Lettuce virus X
Sonchus virus
Diseases Caused by Nematodes
Lesion Nematode
Needle Nematode
Root-Knot Nematodes
Spiral Nematode
Stunt Nematode
Parasitic Plant
Broomrape
Part II. Arthropod Pests
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Family: Aphididae
Aphids
Family: Aleyrodidae
Whiteflies
Family: Cicadellidae
Leafhoppers
Family: Membracidae
Treehoppers
Family: Lygaeidae
Seed Bugs
Family: Miridae
Plant Bugs
Order: Diptera
Family: Agromyzidae
Leafminers
Family: Anthomyiidae
Seedcorn Maggot
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Chrysomelidae, Subfamily: Alticinae
Flea Beetles
Family: Chrysomelidae, Subfamily: Chrysomelinae
Leaf Beetles
Family: Elateridae
Wireworms
Family: Tenebrionidae
Darkling Beetles
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Noctuidae
Caterpillars
Armyworm
Beet Armyworm
Loopers
Cutworms
Corn Earworm and Tobacco Budworm
Family: Arctiidae
Saltmarsh Caterpillar
Order: Thysanoptera
Family: Thripidae
Thrips
Order: Orthoptera
Family: Gryllidae
Field Crickets
Order: Dermaptera
Family: Forficulidae
Earwigs
Order: Collembola
Springtails
Class: Symphyla
Order: Symphyla
Family: Scutigerellidae
Garden Symphylan
Class: Arachnida
Order: Acari
Family: Acaridae
Bulb Mites
Spider Mites
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Isopoda
Sowbugs and Pillbugs
Part III. Injuries and Abiotic and Noninfectious Diseases and Disorders
Mineral Deficiencies and Toxicities
Macronutrients and Micronutrients
Noninfectious Physiological Disorders
Tipburn
Bolting
Rib Discoloration
Weather-Related Injury
Ammonium Toxicity
Soil pH and Salinity
Bird Damage
Herbicide Injury
Part IV. Postharvest Diseases and Disorders
Bacterial Soft Rot
Russet Spotting
Gray Mold
Brown Stain
Pink Rib
Other Postharvest Diseases
and Disorders
Appendix
Glossary
Index
"...is a critically important and essential addition to college
and university library agricultural & farming instructional reference collections."
—Library Bookwatch
Publish Date: 2017
Format: 8.5” × 11” softcover
ISBN: Print: 978-0-89054-577-5
Online: 978-0-89054-578-2
eReader: 978-0-89054-580-5
Pages: 165
Images: 209 color images
Publication Weight: 2 lbs
Edited by Krishna V. Subbarao, R. Michael Davis, Robert L. Gilbertson, and Richard N. Raid