blister rust in Vietnamese

Danh từ
bệnh của cây thông (do nấm gây ra)

Sentence patterns related to "blister rust"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "blister rust" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "blister rust", or refer to the context using the word "blister rust" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. Like other European and Asian white pines, Siberian pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola).

Giống như các loài thông trắng châu Âu và châu Á khác, thông Siberi đề kháng rất tốt trước gỉ sét phồng rộp thông trắng (Cronartium ribicola).

2. Like other European and Asian white pines, Swiss pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola).

Giống như các loài thông trắng châu Âu và châu Á khác, thông Thụy Sĩ đề kháng rất tốt trước gỉ sét phồng rộp thông trắng (Cronartium ribicola).

3. The white-pine blister rust fungus, Cronartium ribicola Fisch. in Rabenh., continues to spread in North America, utilizing various aecial (primary) and telial (alternate) hosts, some of which have only recently been discovered.

4. Black Currants (Blackcurrants) Blackcomb (Ojebyn x Titania) Blackcomb is a high yielding new variety that has high levels of resistance to foliar diseases - mildew, White Pine Blister Rust - , vigorous growth habit and tolerance to late spring frost

5. The Black currants will make an important contribution to our line." The federal government had banned the growing of black and red currants in 1911 when the burgeoning logging industry put pressure on lawmakers to eliminate the currants because they were thought to be an intermediate host of white pine blister rust.

6. Black Currant (Ribes nigrum) is a cold-climate shrub native to northern Europe and Asia, and have been in cultivation for nearly 500 years.Widely grown throughout Europe, Black currants are lesser known in the United States, largely due to a ban on currant farming in the early 1900s, when white blister rust – vectored by Black currants – threatened the U.S