92 BACTERIA IN RELATION TO PLANT DISEASES. 
farm without due consideration of what may happen. Certain bacterial diseases 
might be distributed very readily in this way and good fields rendered worthless 
for certain crops. 
The parasite may gain entrance to the plant through wounds (plates 2 and 4 
and fig. 8) or by way of the stomata (figs. 70 to 75), lenticels, water-pores (figs. 76 
to 79), and nectaries. In recent years the writer has discovered a number of very 
characteristic infections by way of the stomata and the water-pores, which are only 
modified stomata, e. g., in cabbage, mustard, plum, bean, soy-bean, cotton (fig. 80), 
Fig. 76.* 
pelargonium, larkspur, broomcorn, sorghum, maize, cucumber, etc. Pear-blight 
affords one of the most striking examples of wholesale infection by way of the nec- 
taries. The wilt of cucurbits affords an equally good example of infection through 
wounds—namely, leaf-injuries due to beetles. 
*Fic. 76.—Bacterium campestre. Section of a cabbage leaf parallel to the surface and near the 
margin, showing the result of infection through the water-pores. ‘The tissues are browned and de- 
stroyed. Immediately under the leaf-serrature a cavity has formed and the bacteria have begun to 
penetrate into deeper parts of the leaf by way of the spiral vessels, not all of which are occupied. 
This figure is slightly diagrammatic, but only to the extent of omitting the protoplasmic contents 
of the parenchyma cells and of introducing six occupied spiral vessels which belong to the next 
section in the series. No spiral vessels are visible in the lower part of the section because the 
knife passed just below them. Material collected on Long Island, July 16, 1902, and fixed in strong 
alcohol. The spirals here shown are a little too densely occupied by the bacteria to make a good 
drawing under the oil-immersion objective, but a little farther in (beyond X) they are less abundant 
and entirely satisfactory for this purpose. 
NN A 
