Bui. 395, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. 
Plate VI. 
Peach Leaves and Twigs from Inoculation Experiments with Cladosporium 
carpophilum, Madison, Wis., 1914. 
Fig. 1.— Lower surfaces of Chili leaves: a, Control, no infection; b, inoculated by spraying with 
sporiferous suspension from f ruitstrain, badly diseased. Photographed 51 days after inoculation. 
(Magnified, X \ l /&.) Fig. 2. — Lower surface of Chili leaf 93 days after spraying with sporiferous 
suspension from fruit strain, showing sparse primary infection and abundant secondary infec- 
tion in early macroscopic stages. (Natural size.) Fig. 3. — Elberta twigs: a, Control, no infec- 
tion; b, inoculated by spraying with sporiferous suspension from twig strain. Photographed 62 
days after inoculation. (Magnified, X l 3 /4.) Fig. 4.— Diseased Chili twig 128 days after spraying 
with sporiferous suspension from fruit strain, showing abundant primary and secondary infec- 
tion. (Reduced, X i k.) Fig. 5. — Chili twig from control paralleling the inoculation shown in 
figure 4; no infection. Photographed 128 days after the beginning of the experiment. (Re- 
duced, X 4 /o.) 
