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Weeding with fungi

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Weeding with fungi. / AYRES, P ; Paul, Nigel.
In: New Scientist, Vol. 127, No. 1732, 01.09.1990, p. 36-39.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

AYRES, P & Paul, N 1990, 'Weeding with fungi', New Scientist, vol. 127, no. 1732, pp. 36-39.

APA

AYRES, P., & Paul, N. (1990). Weeding with fungi. New Scientist, 127(1732), 36-39.

Vancouver

AYRES P, Paul N. Weeding with fungi. New Scientist. 1990 Sept 1;127(1732):36-39.

Author

AYRES, P ; Paul, Nigel. / Weeding with fungi. In: New Scientist. 1990 ; Vol. 127, No. 1732. pp. 36-39.

Bibtex

@article{b97be47c2cf84e1e9835c3cc9fbe2b0b,
title = "Weeding with fungi",
abstract = "FUNGAL DISEASES are one of the worst threats to cultivated plants. Both the amateur gardener and the arable farmer know to their cost that fungal infections can damage or destroy their plants. For a century or more the urgent economic need to understand and control diseases of crops has driven the science of plant pathology. But what the scientists had overlooked was the extent to which wild plants are also vulnerable to fungal infections, presenting an opportunity to turn fungal diseases to the farmer's advantage - as weedkillers. Mycoherbicides, fungi that kill weeds, promise to deliver what other herbicides cannot: a highly specific treatment aimed at a single species of weed that will leave other plants untouched.",
author = "P AYRES and Nigel Paul",
year = "1990",
month = sep,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
pages = "36--39",
journal = "New Scientist",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "1732",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Weeding with fungi

AU - AYRES, P

AU - Paul, Nigel

PY - 1990/9/1

Y1 - 1990/9/1

N2 - FUNGAL DISEASES are one of the worst threats to cultivated plants. Both the amateur gardener and the arable farmer know to their cost that fungal infections can damage or destroy their plants. For a century or more the urgent economic need to understand and control diseases of crops has driven the science of plant pathology. But what the scientists had overlooked was the extent to which wild plants are also vulnerable to fungal infections, presenting an opportunity to turn fungal diseases to the farmer's advantage - as weedkillers. Mycoherbicides, fungi that kill weeds, promise to deliver what other herbicides cannot: a highly specific treatment aimed at a single species of weed that will leave other plants untouched.

AB - FUNGAL DISEASES are one of the worst threats to cultivated plants. Both the amateur gardener and the arable farmer know to their cost that fungal infections can damage or destroy their plants. For a century or more the urgent economic need to understand and control diseases of crops has driven the science of plant pathology. But what the scientists had overlooked was the extent to which wild plants are also vulnerable to fungal infections, presenting an opportunity to turn fungal diseases to the farmer's advantage - as weedkillers. Mycoherbicides, fungi that kill weeds, promise to deliver what other herbicides cannot: a highly specific treatment aimed at a single species of weed that will leave other plants untouched.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 127

SP - 36

EP - 39

JO - New Scientist

JF - New Scientist

IS - 1732

ER -