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World Encyclopedia of Plant Bacterial Diseases

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  • Bacterial blight (rot) of sedum
  • (-) Bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak
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  • Bacterial canker (Leaf spot)
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  • Bacterial leaf and stem necrosis
  • Bacterial leaf blight
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  • Bacterial leaf spot (Bacterial necrosis)
  • Bacterial leaf spot (Blight)
  • Bacterial leaf spot (Canker)
  • Bacterial leaf spot (Head rot)
  • Bacterial leaf spot and canker
  • Bacterial leaf spot of beet
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  • Bacterial seedling blight
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  • Bacterial soft rot
  • Bacterial soft rot (Cladode rot)
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  • Bacterial wilt (Moko disease)
  • Bacterial wilt and blight
  • Bacterial wilt and dieback
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  • Bermudagrass white leaf
  • Black chaff (Bacterial leaf streak)
  • Blackleg
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  • Blood disease
  • Blossom blast
  • Bois noir disease
  • Brittle root
  • Brown blotch
  • Brown line and decline
  • Brown rot (Bacteral wilt)
  • Bugtok disease (Moko disease)
  • Bunch disease
  • Bunch disease (Witches'-broom)
  • Cane blight
  • Carrot yellows
  • Center rot
  • Chocolate spot
  • Citrus canker
  • Citrus greening (Huanglongbing)
  • Citrus stubborn disease
  • Citrus variegated chlorosis
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  • Common scab (Potato scab)
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  • Crown gall
  • Crown gall (Leafy gall)
  • Deep bark canker
  • Dodonaea yellows
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  • Drippy nut disease
  • Ear rot
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  • Elm yellows
  • Enterobacter bulb decay
  • European stone fruit yellows
  • Fasciation (Shoot proliferation)
  • Fire blight
  • Foamy canker
  • Goss's bacterial wilt and blight
  • Grain rot
  • Greasy center
  • Greening disease
  • Green petal disease
  • Gumming disease
  • Gypsophila gall
  • Hairy root
  • Halo blight
  • Head rot (Jelly rot)
  • Holcus spot
  • Hollow stalk
  • Internal yellowing
  • Larkspur virescence
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  • Lethal yellowing
  • Lethal yellowing/scorch
  • Maize bushy stunt
  • Marginal leaf blight
  • Mulberry dwarf disease
  • Multiplier disease
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  • Oleander knot
  • Oleander leaf scorch
  • Olive knot
  • Papaya dieback
  • Pear decline
  • Periwinkle wilt
  • Periwinkle yellows
  • Petal blight
  • Phony disease (Phony peach)
  • Phytoplasma disease
  • Pierce's disease
  • Pink disease
  • Pith necrosis
  • Plum leaf scald
  • Pseudomonas leaf spot
  • Purple stain
  • Ratoon stunt
  • Red stripe (Top rot)
  • Rice yellow dwarf
  • Rugose leaf curl
  • Saber tooth
  • Shallow bark canker
  • Sheath brown rot
  • Slime flux
  • Slippery skin
  • Sour skin
  • Stewart's wilt
  • Strawberry lethal decline
  • Strawberry yellows
  • Sudden death (Wilt)
  • Sugar beet scab
  • Sugarcane dwarf (White leaf)
  • Sumatra disease
  • Sweet potato little leaf
  • Sweet potato scab
  • Syngonium blight
  • Syringae leaf spot
  • Syringae seedling blight and leaf spot
  • Tomato big bud
  • Varnish spot
  • Vinca virescence
  • Walnut blight
  • Western wetwood
  • Wildfire
  • Wildfire (Angular leaf spot)
  • Witches'-broom
  • X-disease
  • X-disease (Eastern X)
  • X-disease (Peach yellow leaf roll)
  • (-) X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
  • Xanthomonas leaf blight
  • Xanthomonas leaf spot
  • Xanthomonas wilt
  • Yellow wilt
  • 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni'
  • Dickeya zeae
  • Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola
Done

RESULTS

(7)
FILTER
DISEASE: Bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak
HOST: Rice
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (bacterial leaf streak) causes water-soaked streaks with yellow ooze (left side), and X. oryzae pv. oryzae (bacterial blight) causes brown streaks that have turned white (right side).
Bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak | Rice
DISEASE: Bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak
HOST: Rice (Oryza sativa)
PATHOGEN: Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzae
SOURCE: T. Mew
DISEASE: Bacterial foot rot
HOST: Rice
The disease causes sheaths to turn dark brown and rot; dead leaves droop. Nodes, culms, and crowns also decay, and infected tillers are easily detached from the crown. Culms and internodes turn black.
Bacterial foot rot | Rice
DISEASE: Bacterial foot rot
HOST: Rice (Oryza sativa)
PATHOGEN: Dickeya zeae
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Erwinia chrysanthemi pv. zeae
SOURCE: M. Goto
DISEASE: Bacterial foot rot
HOST: Rice
Decayed culms (right) and healthy culms (left). Leaf sheaths of infected plants exhibit dark brown decay and attached leaves turn yellow and wilt.
Bacterial foot rot | Rice
DISEASE: Bacterial foot rot
HOST: Rice (Oryza sativa)
PATHOGEN: Dickeya zeae
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Erwinia chrysanthemi pv. zeae
SOURCE: M. Goto
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry
Comparison of normal, dark cherries (in hand) with infected, immature cherries with less pigmentation.
X-disease (Western X) or buckskin | Cherry
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry (Prunus avium)
PATHOGEN: 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni'
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Phytoplasma X-disease group
SOURCE: A. Purcell, M. Davis
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry
Healthy cherry shoot (left) and stunted shoot (right).
X-disease (Western X) or buckskin | Cherry
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry (Prunus avium)
PATHOGEN: 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni'
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Phytoplasma X-disease group
SOURCE: S. Thomson
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry
Infected trees on 'Mazzard' rootstock (right) may live for years, producing fruit with symptoms. Trees on 'Mahaleb' rootstock (left) usually die rapidly in year of infection, about time of fruit ripening.
X-disease (Western X) or buckskin | Cherry
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry (Prunus avium)
PATHOGEN: 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni'
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Phytoplasma X-disease group
SOURCE: S. Thomson
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry
X-disease causes undersized, yellowish fruit. Diseased branches turn rusty red near end of season. Some defoliation occurs on diseased branches.
X-disease (Western X) or buckskin | Cherry
DISEASE: X-disease (Western X) or buckskin
HOST: Cherry (Prunus cerasus)
PATHOGEN: 'Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni'
PATHOGEN SYNONYM: Phytoplasma X-disease group
SOURCE: A. Jones

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