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Seed Disinfection: I. An Outline of an Investigation on Disinfectant Dusts Containing Mercury.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

W. A. R. Dillon Weston
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge.)
J. R. Booer
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge.)

Extract

An outline is given of an investigation that has dealt with disinfectant dusts containing mercury, and it is shown that the majority of the inorganic mercury salts are of little value in this respect. Some organic mercury salts have been tested and the result of laboratory and field work suggests that there is a close relationship between composition and fungicidal power. In the series R-Hg-X, where R is a hydrocarbon and X an acidic radicle, the fungicidal power appears to decrease with the increase of the molecule of R. A study is made of the significance of X in the methyl series and the results as they apply to disease control are recorded on a series of graphs.

The specificity of some of the compounds is noted and a brief mention is made of the treatment of seeds other than cereals.

It is suggested that there is no evidence for stimulation in the sense of tonic effect but that instances of better germination, growth and crop yields are due not only to the control of seed-borne organisms but to the preservation of the food reserves in the seed from the attack of soil organisms or mould organisms adherent to the seed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1935

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References

1 Dillon Weston, W. A. R., “Ineffective nature of iodine dust as a fungicide against Tilletia caries”, Phytopathology (Sept. 1930), 20, No. 9.Google Scholar