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45 records were found.

  • Pennington, L.H.; Snell, W.H.; York, H.H.; Spaulding, P. (1921). Investigations of Cronartium ribicola in 1920. Phytopathology 11: 170-172.

  • Schrenk, H. von; Spaulding, P. (1903). The bitter rot fungus. Science N.S. 17: 750-751.

  • Schrenk, H. von; Spaulding, P. (1903). The bitter rot of apples. United States Department of Agriculture Bureau of Plant Industry Bulletin 44: 54 pp., 9 plates.

  • Spaulding, P. (1916). The blister rust disease of white pine. Amer. Forestry 22: 97-98, 4 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1917). The white pine blister disease. Amer. Forestry 23: 67-74.

  • Spaulding, P. (1919). Scientific researches and field investigations in 1918. Investigations in the United States Department of Agriculture. Amer. Plant Pest Com. Bull. 2 (Edn 2): 11-13.

  • Spaulding, P. (1911). The timber rot caused by Lenzites sepiaria. Bull. Dept. Agric., Washington 1911: 46 pp. 4 tabs, 3 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1922). Investigations of the white-pine blister rust. Bull. US Department of Agriculture 957: 100 pp., 13 figs, 6 tabs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1929). Relation of pathology to forestry in the northeast. Canad. Woodlands Rev. 1: 7-8, 18.

  • Spaulding, P. (1918). Some biological aspects of the spread of white-pine blister rust. (Abstract). Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 8 (2): 40-41.

  • Spaulding, P. (1912). Notes upon three diseases in the eastern states. Mycologia 4 (3): 148-151.

  • Spaulding, P. (1929). The role of fungi in the disposal of slash. Papers. Forest Protection Conference. New York College of Forestry. 11-12, 17-23.

  • Spaulding, P. (1911). The rusts of Tsuga canadensis. Phytopathology 1: 94-96, 2 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1913). Notes on Cronartium comptoniae. Phytopathology 3: 62.

  • Spaulding, P. (1913). Notes on Cronartium comptoniae. II. Phytopathology 3: 308-310.

  • Spaulding, P. (1914). The damping-off of coniferous seedlings. Phytopathology 4: 73-88, tab. VI, 1 fig.

  • Spaulding, P. (1917). Notes on Cronartium comptoniae. III. Phytopathology 7: 49-51.

  • Spaulding, P. (1917). Evidence of the overwintering of Cronartium ribicola [abstract]. Phytopathology 7 (1): 58.

  • Spaulding, P. (1917). Needle rust on Pinus resinosa. Phytopathology 7: 225.

  • Spaulding, P. (1922). Viability of telia of Cronartium ribicola in early winter. Phytopathology 12: 221-224.

  • Spaulding, P. (1923). Foreign studies of white pine blister rust. Phytopathology 13: 45.

  • Spaulding, P. (1925). A partial explanation to the relativesusceptibility of the white pine to the white pine blister rust. Phytopathology 15: 591-597.

  • Spaulding, P. (1927). A serious disease of birches. Phytopathology 17 (1): 59.

  • Spaulding, P. (1916). Foresters have a vital interest in the white pine blister rust. Proc. Soc. Amer. Forester 2: 40-47.

  • Spaulding, P. (1914). Diseases of the eastern hemlock. Proc. Soc. Amer. Foresters 9: 245-256.

  • Spaulding, P. (1912). Notes upon Cronartium ribicola. Science N.S 35: 146-147.

  • Spaulding, P. (1914). Undesiderable foreign plant diseases. Transactions of the Massachusetts Hort. Soc. 1: 153-179.

  • Spaulding, P. (1914). New facts concerning the white-pine, blister rust. US Dept. Agric. Bull. 16: 8 pp.

  • Spaulding, P. (1911). The blister rust of white pine. US Dept. Agric. Bureau of Plant Industry Bull. 206: 78 pp., 2 tabs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1916). The white pine blister rust. US Dept. Agric. Farmers’ Bull. 742: 1-15, 1 tab. 4 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1913). The present status of the white-pine blister rust. US Dept. Agric. Ind. Circ. 29: 9-20, 8 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1929). White pine blister rust: a comparison of European with North American conditions. US Dept. Agric. Techn. Bull. 87: 59 pp., 14 figs.

  • Spaulding, P. (1929). Decay of slash of northern white pine in southern New England. US Dept. Agric. Techn. Bull. 132: 20 pp.

  • Spaulding, P. (1961). Foreign diseases of forest trees of the world – an annotated list. USDA Agriculture Handbook 197: 1-361.

  • Spaulding, P. (1935). Lophodermium pinastri causing leafcast of Norway pine in nurseries. USDA Northeast For. Exp. Sta. Tech. Note 18: 1-2.

  • Spaulding, P. (1915). Forest fungi of Bethel. Vermont Bot. and Bird Club. Joint Bull. 1: 24-25.

  • Spaulding, P. (1918). Results of scientific investigations. White Pine Blister Rust Com. Suppression Pine Blister Rust in North America. 37-38.

  • Spaulding, P.; Detwiller, S.B.; Pettis, C.R.; Metcalf, H. (1917). The white pine blister disease. Amer. Forestry 23: 67-74.

  • Spaulding, P.; Field, E.C. (1912). Two dangerous imported plant diseases. Bull. Dept. Agric., Washington 1912: 29 pp., 3 figs.

  • Spaulding, P.; Pierce, R.G. (1917). State and national quarantines against the white pine blister rust. Phytopathology 7: 319-320.

  • Spaulding, P.; Rathbun-Gravatt, A. (1925). Longevity of the teliospores and accompanying uredospores of Cronartium ribicola Fischer in 1923. Journal of Agricultural Research 31: 901-916, 1 fig.

  • Spaulding, P.; Rathbun-Gravatt, A. (1926). The influence of physical factors on the viability of sporidia of Cronartium ribicola Fischer. Journal of Agricultural Research 33: 397-433, 17 figs.

  • Spaulding, P.; Rathbun-Gravatt, A. (1925). Conditions antecedent to the infection of white pines by Cronartium ribicola in the north-eastern United States. Phytopathology 15 (10): 573-584.

  • Spaulding, P.; Siggers, P.V. (1927). The European larch canker in America. Science N.S 66: 480-481.

  • York, H.H.; Spaulding, P. (1918). The overwintering of Cronartium ribicola on Ribes. Phytopathology 8: 617-619.


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