runner plant nurseries with methyl bromide alternative fumigants HortScience 43 1495 1500 Gilreath, J.P. Santos, B.M. 2004 Manejo de Cyperus rotundus con alternativas al bromuro de metilo en tomate de mesa Manejo Integrado de Plagas y Agroecología 71 54
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James P. Gilreath and Bielinski M. Santos
Dong Sub Kim, Steven B. Kim, Mike Stanghellini, Melody Meyer-Jertberg, and Steven A. Fennimore
. Gullino, A.L. Lamberti, F. López-Aranda, J.M. 2003 Alternatives to methyl bromide in strawberry production in the United States of America and the Mediterranean region Phytopathol. Mediterr. 42 220 244 Baines, R.C. Klotz, L.J. Clarke, O
Judy A. Thies and Amnon Levi
of 15% to 20% for watermelon in Georgia and Florida ( Lynch and Carpenter, 1999 ). The removal of methyl bromide from the U.S. market has raised great interest in developing an alternative approach for managing root-knot nematodes in vegetable crops
Francisco Doñas-Uclés, Diego Pérez-Madrid, Celia Amate-Llobregat, Enrique M. Rodríguez-García, and Francisco Camacho-Ferre
.). Global report on validated alternatives to the use of methyl bromide soil fumigation. Plant production and protection paper. FAO, Rome Bosland, P.W. Lindsey, D.L. 1991 A seedling screen for Phytophthora root rot of pepper, Capsicum annuum Plant Dis. 75
Feras Almasri, Husein A. Ajwa, Sanjai J. Parikh, and Kassim Al-Khatib
application of alternative fumigants to methyl bromide for strawberry production HortScience 39 1707 1715 Bangarwa, S.K. Norsworthy, J.K. Gbur, E.E. Zhang, J. Habtom, T. 2011 Allyl isothiocyanate: A methyl bromide replacement in polyethylene-mulched bell
Kshitij Khatri, Natalia Peres, Joseph Noling, and Nathan Boyd
. Conf. Methyl Bromide Alternatives Emission Reductions 20 1 5 Dittmar, P.J. Dufault, N.S. Desaeger, J. Noling, J.W. Stansly, P. Boyd, N.S. Paret, M.S. Webb, S.E. 2018 Integrated pest management, p. 19–33. In: P.J. Dittmar, J.H. Freeman, M.L. Paret, and H
Michael G. Bausher
The production and consumption of tomatoes in the United States and worldwide ranks it as a major vegetable crop. The use of methyl bromide fumigation for pest control is being phased out under the Montreal Protocol ( EPA, 2010 ). There is also a
development and shuck dehiscence. Phenyl Isothiocyanate Performance as a Methyl Bromide Alternative Purple nutsedge control in vegetable crops is challenging in the absence of methyl bromide. Bangarwa et al. (p. 402) evaluated the efficacy of phenyl
Bielinski M. Santos, James P. Gilreath, Camille E. Esmel, and Myriam N. Siham
control methods—namely, herbicides and soil fumigation with alternatives to MBr—to reduce bell pepper yield losses. Literature cited Gilreath, J.P. Motis, T.N. Santos, B.M. 2005a Cyperus spp. control with reduced methyl bromide plus chloropicrin doses
Jayesh B. Samtani, Celeste Gilbert, J. Ben Weber, Krishna V. Subbarao, Rachael E. Goodhue, and Steven A. Fennimore
Alternatives to Methyl Bromide. 18 Nov. 2011. < http://ec.europa.eu/clima/events/0039/crops_alternatives_en.pdf >. Duniway, J.M. 2002b Status of chemical alternatives to methyl bromide for pre-plant fumigation of soil Phytopathology 92 1337 1343 Elmore, C