From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6061 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Tuesday, March 2 2021 Volume 14 : Number 6061 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Did you know that you're meant to be successful? ["Destiny Calling" Subject: Did you know that you're meant to be successful? Did you know that you're meant to be successful? http://wealthsystem.cyou/o-iCuRd-HkzEfBQZ1n5CjmsUviGXse89qJk1qtBEaEynH8FF http://wealthsystem.cyou/5yQjKqDeheLYQr-5-aY_AC4T_nVDE0qgx2Hr1Pq4REySMgRZ rrett's research focused on plant root disease caused by soil-borne pathogens, particularly fungi, and aimed to elucidate the pathogen's natural activity with a view to preventing or controlling plant disease. He is acknowledged as "the founding father of root pathology." Recognising that root pathology is complex and multifactorial, and describing then-current methodology as "crude and inadequate", he used an experimental approach that changed one factor against a constant background. Most of his experiments were simple and eschewed technology to use only basic equipment; for example, he preferred jam jars and glass tumblers to specialist soil containers because they were less expensive, and even once purchased rejected plastic lavatory cisterns for his laboratory to use. His colleagues at Cambridge described him as "one of the last 'string and sealing wax' scientists." He also studied the saprophytic and survival stages of the pathogen's life cycle, in addition to the parasitic stage. Much of his work focused on Gaeumannomyces graminis (previously classifed in the genus Ophiobolus), a soil-borne fungus that is the causative agent of take-all, the principal root disease of wheat, which Garrett employed as a model disease system. His early papers on soil conditions and G. graminis, based on work at Rothamsted before the Second World War, are described by the Indian mycologist C. V. Subramanian as "very original in approach, content and technique, and are classic." Garrett showed that the level of bacteria in the soil influences infection with G. graminis, an early demonstration of Howard S. Fawcett's concept of biological antagonism or competition in the soil. He showed that the fungus was unable to spread through soil, requiring direct hyphal contact with a root; this was later shown by Garrett's laboratory and others to be the result of limited oxygen. He examined how the fungus could nevertheless persist in soil, finding that in the presence of sufficient nitrogen it was able to grow using cellulose from cereal stubble as a carbon source. He studied how likely individual fungal spores are to infe ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6061 **********************************************