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Common/spear rot crown disease in oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.): anatomy of the affected tissue

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Authors

Monge Pérez, José Eladio
Vásquez Morera, Nelly
Chinchilla, Carlos Manuel

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Abstract

Bent rachises in palms with symptoms of “crown disease” had fibres with thinner and less lignified cell walls than normal cells. Also, vascular bundles were less numerous, thinner, and had fewer fibres than healthy tissue. The first symptom observed before necrosis in leaflets was the collapse of the hypodermal cells. Fungal mycelium was found intercellularly in some preparations. The structural changes observed explain, in part, the softness of these tissues, which causes the bending of the rachises that characterizes the disease. Glyphosate applied to young palms caused anatomical changes similar to those observed in palms affected by crown disease.

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Elaeis guineensis, Crown disease, Common spear rot, Anatomy

Citation

http://jopr.mpob.gov.my/commonspear-rot-crown-disease-in-oil-palm-elaeis-guineensis-jacq-anatomy-of-the-affected-tissue/

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