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Historical reports of clubroot date back to the 13th century in Europe.
Clubroot is a disease that prefers warmer temperatures and moist conditions.
We always tell folk to watch out for clubroot, because the wallflower is actually a member of the cabbage family.
Clubroot is very hard to control.
Clubroot can be a reoccurring problem for years because it is easily spread from plant to plant.
Liming has been an effective control measure to curb clubroot since the 19th century.
This method does not eradicate clubroot but it will slow its development by creating unfavorable conditions.
Clubroot gets its name from its primary symptom: enlargement of the plant roots.
Do NOT use after brassicas or where clubroot is a problem.
In addition, Calcium and Magnesium can be added to the nutrition profile of the soil to help control clubroot.
Some fungicide has been found to help with clubroot but it is very pricey and would take huge amounts to saturate the soil.
This takes massive applications to field soil in order to effect all of the soil where spores of clubroot are found.
For the musician, see Clubroot (musician).
Additionally, Cabbage clubroot may be a stubborn disease due to its ability to form a microbial cyst as an overwintering structure.
It includes the species Plasmodiophora brassicae, which causes the disease cabbage clubroot.
Cabbage monstrosities (clubroot of cabbage with rotating QuickTime image).
The only fungicide shown to be effective in treating clubroot is PCNB.
Mendel (Brassica napus L.), as a clubroot resistant crop.
Clubroot is a soilborne disease caused by the biotrophic protist Plasmodiophora brassica.
Clubroot (caused by the protist Plasmodiophora brassicae)
Clubroot (born Dan Richmond, ca. 1985 is a dubstep musician located in St Albans, England.
Grass, tawny with summer, speckled with walking cactus and an occasional clubroot, smelling warm and dusty but fresher than the lowlands to the east.
In the late 19th century, a severe epidemic of clubroot destroyed large proportions of the cabbage crop in St. Petersburg.
This is partly because of its tendency to grow spindly and leggy during its second year, but more importantly its susceptibility to infections such as clubroot.
The council's threat bewilders and frightens them, especially as other legislation requires them to 'destroy by fire' diseased waste like clubroot infections and potato haulms.