275 
*(89) 1906. Takeall in wheat. Jour. Dept. Agr. S. Austral. 10 
(No. 5):280-285. Abs. in E. S. R. 18: 947. 
Thirty per cent.-injury is reported in some fields. 
Kirchner, O. 
*(90) 1906. Die Krankheiten und Beschidigungen unserer land- 
wirtschaftlichen Kulturpflanzen, p. 33-34, 81. 
‘ The disease followed weakening of the plant from other 
causes, as spring frost, poor nutriment, too much water, etc. 
Ophiobolus is perhaps not a true parasite. 
Appel , 
(91) 1906. Untersuchungen tiber die Gattung Fusarium. Ber. a., 
d. Biol. Anst. f. Land. u. Forstw. 
Hiltner, L. 
(92) 1906. Ber. Kgl. Bayer. Agr. Anst. Munchen, p. 
50. 
Robinson, G. H. : 
*(93) 190%. Take all and its control. Jour. Dept. Agr. Victoria, 
5 (No. 4): 253-256. Abs. in E. S. R. 19: 151, and in 
Hollrung’s Jahresb. 10: 105. 
A dry summer following a wet winter is most favorable to 
the disease. The butts are quite black and perithecia occur 
in the sheaths. 
(94) 1907. - Heft 6? Bericht tiber die Tatigkeit der 
Kaiserl. Biologischen Anstalten in Jahre 1907:11. As 
cited in Ill. Land. Ztg. 33 (No. 65): 589. 
Kruger, F. 
*(95) 1908. Untersuchungen tiber die Fusskrankheit der Getreides. 
Arb. K. Biol. Anst. f. Land. u. Forstw. 6 (No. 3): 321- . 
351, pl. 1. Abs. in E. S. R. 22:148, and in Hollrung’s 
Jahresb. 11: 127, 137. 
Author holds that while Leptosphaeria and Ophiobolus do 
cause disease as facultative parasites they are not the im- 
mediate cause of the trouble, which arises from weakening of 
the wheat by rain, frost, etc. Inoculation experiments were 
made with Leptosphaeria, Dictyosporium, Ophiobolus, Hen- 
dersonia, Coniosporium, and Fusarium. Leptosphaeria herpo- 
trichoides was found on rye and wheat; Ophiobolus herpo- 
trichus on rye, wheat, and barley. 
Stormer, K. 
*(96) 1908. Die in der Provinz in Sommer 1908 beobachteten 
Krankheiten aus Getreide. Landw. Wcehnschr. Sachsen, 
10 (No. 35): 306-309; No. 38:331, 332; No. 39: 340, 
341; No. 40: 347-349. Abs. in E. S. R. 20: 1042. 
Author regards the cause of the disease as still in doubt. 
