John A. Stevenson
Bureau of Plant Industry
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Mycologia | 1945
John A. Stevenson; Ernest P. Imle
In December, 1943, an unknown disease characterized by a severe leaf spotting was found in a nursery of Hevea Spruceana at Turrialba, Costa Rica. Six weeks later, following a prolonged rainy period, this disease had reached epiphytotic proportions in the spruceana nursery where it was causing leaf, petiole, and twig blight, and also was producing minor damage in a nearby nursery of Hevea brasiliensis seedlings. In addition to Turrialba (elevation 2000 ft.) the disease was noted near Gualipes, Costa Rica (elevation 600 ft.). An earlier observation of the same disease was made by W. J. Martin on H. brasiliensis at El Palmar, Tezonapa, Mexico, but no collections were made. The leaf spots are circular to oval, at times somewhat irregular or elongated along the veins, but not vein limited, appearing much the same on both surfaces. Primary lesions vary in diameter from two to ten millimeters, but frequently coalesce, particularly on younger leaves, to involve an entire leaf and may bring about premature abscission. The spots are brown at first, becoming ashen at the center with a brown border, and on mature leaves (FIG. 1) they are often ringed by a chlorotic halo. Necrotic areas split irregularly and may even fall away in part. Petiole lesions are common and, when severe, cause leaf abrasions or petiole breakage. Petiole lesions or leaf spots sometimes spread down to the leaf axils and cause sunken twig cankers or die-back of young soft twigs (FIG. 2). This disease has been found on Hevea brasiliensis, H. Spruceana, H. guianensis, H. Benthamiana, and on hybrids of H. brasiliensis x Spruceana. H. Spruceana clones selected for resistance to South American leaf blight (Dothidella Ulei P. Henn.) are readily attacked. H. brasiliensis clones, highly resistant to D. Ulei, have been heavily infected when growing under a thin overstory of
Mycologia | 1943
John A. Stevenson
The following fungi received from sources as indicated appear to be heretofore undescribed, but worthy of a name. Type specimens are deposited in the Mycological Collections of the Bureau of Plant Industry, Plant Industry Station, Beltsville, Maryland. Portions of the type collections of the Muller species from Brazil are also deposited in the herbarium of the Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University and in the private herbarium of A. S. Muller. Where the material was adequate portions of the type collection of other species here named have been deposited in other mycological herbaria as indicated.
Mycologia | 1941
John A. Stevenson
(1941). Louis Charles Christopher Krieger, 1873–1940. Mycologia: Vol. 33, No. 3, pp. 241-247.
Mycologia | 1963
John A. Stevenson; L. A. Ames
Mycologia | 1967
John A. Stevenson; Josiah L. Lowe
Mycologia | 1973
John A. Stevenson
Mycologia | 1949
Lee Ling; John A. Stevenson
Mycologia | 1968
John A. Stevenson; I. L. Conners
Mycologia | 1959
John A. Stevenson; A. Pilat; O. Usak
Mycologia | 1951
John A. Stevenson