﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--RSS generated by Windows SharePoint Services V3 RSS Generator on 6/19/2013 10:45:13 PM-->
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="/apsstore/shopapspress/_layouts/RssXslt.aspx?List=8a9fa7e9-65a4-442e-a58c-6aa2ffbb3cb5" version="1.0"?>
<rss version="2.0">
  <channel>
    <title>Shop APS PRESS: Pages</title>
    <link>http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/AllItems.aspx</link>
    <description>RSS feed for the Pages list.</description>
    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 20 Jun 2013 03:45:13 GMT</lastBuildDate>
    <generator>Windows SharePoint Services V3 RSS Generator</generator>
    <ttl>60</ttl>
    <image>
      <title>Shop APS PRESS: Pages</title>
      <url>/apsstore/shopapspress/_layouts/images/homepage.gif</url>
      <link>http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/AllItems.aspx</link>
    </image>
    <item>
      <title>default</title>
      <link>http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=1</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div><b>Contact:</b> System Account</div>
<div><b>Page Content:</b> <p align=center><map name=FPMap0><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44181.aspx" shape=rect coords="20, 14, 147, 183"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44020.aspx" shape=rect coords="163, 15, 298, 181"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/20944.aspx" shape=rect coords="323, 15, 451, 187"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44006.aspx" shape=rect coords="15, 215, 145, 379"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44082.aspx" shape=rect coords="172, 212, 286, 381"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/43993.aspx" shape=rect coords="319, 211, 457, 378"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/43948.aspx" shape=rect coords="17, 419, 148, 582"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44150.aspx" shape=rect coords="174, 414, 307, 585"><area href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/44013.aspx" shape=rect coords="319, 416, 461, 585"></map><img border=0 src="/apsstore/shopapspress/PublishingImages/Banners/New_Titles_Plain_REV.jpg" width=470 height=610 usemap="#FPMap0"></p></div>
<div><b>DisplayTitle:</b> <center><img style="border-bottom:0px solid;border-left:0px solid;border-top:0px solid;border-right:0px solid" border=0 src="/apsstore/shopapspress/PublishingImages/Banners/bookstore_header.jpg"></center>
<center> </center>
<center>ALL <a title="" href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Diseaseid.aspx"><u>COMPENDIA TITLES</u></a> ON SALE</center></div>
]]></description>
      <author>System Account</author>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2009 18:44:53 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=1</guid>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>AboutAPSPRESS</title>
      <link>http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=337</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div><b>Contact:</b> Ashley Armstrong</div>
<div><b>Page Content:</b> <p>APS PRESS is the publishing imprint of The American Phytopathological Society, a non-profit, international organization that advances the science and practice of plant health management in agricultural, urban, and forest settings. The Society was founded in 1908 and has grown from 130 charter members to more than 5000 scientists and practitioners worldwide.<br><br>APS PRESS has published more than 300 titles that cover the spectrum of plant disease and related topics. Beyond traditional books and field guides, APS PRESS publishes multi-media products including CDs, DVDs, and disease diagnosis software.<br><br>With the variety of plant health subjects covered, APS PRESS publications serve people with interests in many different subjects and affiliations with a variety of disciplines, some of which include: educators, students, plant scientists, extension specialists, crop consultants, county agents, growers, master gardeners, horticulture specialists, nursery and landscape industry, greenhouses, forestry specialists, plant pathologists, mycologists, nematologists, virologists, entomologists, weed scientists, plant molecular biologists, agricultural historians, among others.</p>
<p>APS PRESS is guided by a volunteer <a title="" href="/members/directories/Pages/PressEdBoard.aspx">editorial board</a> comprised of scientists in all major areas of plant pathology. You are invited to submit a proposal to <a title="" href="/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Author.aspx">publish your work</a> with APS PRESS. </p></div>
<div><b>SectionFeatured:</b> No</div>
<div><b>DisplayTitle:</b> <p>About APS PRESS</p></div>
]]></description>
      <author>Ashley Armstrong</author>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Mar 2010 17:27:53 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=337</guid>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>02301</title>
      <link>http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=476</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div><b>Description:</b> APS PRESS Bookstore: This versatile pocket guide has 126 descriptive entries with more than 700 high resolution color photos to help identify pest problems and understand the beneficial organisms of strawberries, raspberries, and highbush blueberries.</div>
<div><b>Contact:</b> Karen Ek</div>
<div><b>Rollup Image:</b> <img alt="" border="0" src="/apsstore/shopapspress/PublishingImages/tn/02301.jpg" style="BORDER: 0px solid; "></div>
<div><b>Page Image:</b> <img alt="" border="0" src="/apsstore/shopapspress/PublishingImages/02301.jpg" style="BORDER: 0px solid; "></div>
<div><b>Page Content:</b> <p><span class=ms-rteCustom-ProductSale>NEW!</span></p>
<p><font color="#400040"><span class=ms-rteCustom-ProductSale><span class=ms-rteCustom-PullQuoteGreen>Excellent quality and value priced! <br></span></span><span class=ms-rteCustom-ProductSale><span class=ms-rteCustom-PullQuote><span class=ms-rteCustom-PullQuoteGreen>Pre-order the new English edition now. </span></span></span></font></p>
<p><span><span><span>This book is expected to ship in April 2013.</span></span></span></p></div>
<div><b>Article Date:</b> 2/1/2013</div>
<div><b>ProductCategory:</b> Disease Identification, IPM, New Release</div>
<div><b>ProductLanguage:</b> English</div>
<div><b>ProductCollationData:</b> ©2013; 4.25&quot; x 7.25&quot; spiral bound; 344 pages; 700 color images and illustrations

This title is published by The Reference Centre of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and exclusively distributed outside of Canada by APS PRESS.</div>
<div><b>ProductDescription:</b> <p>Originally published in French, this versatile pocket guide has 126 descriptive entries with more than 700 high resolution color photographs and illustrations to help identify pest problems and better understand the beneficial organisms present in strawberries, raspberries, and highbush blueberries. It is an excellent visual scouting tool when viewing symptoms, but also provides information about life cycle, conditions, and best practices with background information on the main phenological stages of the crops, diseases, insects and other organisms, screening and diagnosis. A useful glossary is included. </p>
<p>The guide was created in response to a simple request from strawberry, raspberry and highbush blueberry producers in Quebec to provide photographs to help them identify problems in their crops. The guide clearly meets a need in the berry industry to facilitate crop monitoring and diagnosis in Canada, the United States, and should apply to other berry growing regions. This Guide will help advisers and the berry producers they serve to manage their crops more effectively.</p>
<p><em>Diseases, Pests and Beneficial Organisms of Strawberry, Raspberry, and Blueberry</em> enhances the information in the APS PRESS Compendium of Plant Disease Series covering these crops.</p></div>
<div><b>ProductContents:</b> <i>Foreword<br>Authors and collaborators<br>Acknowledgements<br>Explanation of the fact sheets <br>Where, when, and what to look at? What to note? <br>Main types of larvae of insects<br>that undergo complete metamorphosis <br>How to distinguish between hemiptera (Heteroptera) and homoptera larvae <br>How to distinguish between mites, spiders and small insects </i>
<h2><br>Strawberry Diseases and Pests</h2>
<h3>Phenological stages<br>Scouting table for the main strawberry pests<br>Diagnostic key for strawberry Diseases</h3>
<h4>Anthracnose fruit rot<br>Powdery mildew<br>Aster yellows, green petal and<br>multiplier disease<br>Viral diseases<br>Gray mold <br>Slime mold<br>Leather rot (Crown rot) <br>Black root rot<br>Red stele root rot<br>Leaf spots<br>Verticillium wilt</h4>
<h3>Pests</h3>
<h4>Redheaded flea beetle<br>Strawberry bud weevil<br>Meadow spittlebug <br>Strawberry root weevil and black vine weevil<br>Strawberry rootworm<br>Potato leafhopper<br>Springtails <br>Locusts and grasshoppers<br>Gall wasps<br>June beetles (May beetles) <br>Strawberry seed beetle<br>Slugs<br>Mammals<br>Noctuids, cutworms, armyworms<br>European earwig<br>Strawberry aphid<br>Tarnished plant bug<br>Rose chafers<br>Cyclamen mite<br>Click beetles (wireworms) <br>Two-spotted spider mite<br>Western flower thrips<br>Leafrollers</h4>
<h2><br>Raspberry Diseases and Pests</h2>
<h3>Phenological stages<br>Scouting table for the main raspberry pests<br>Diagnostic key for raspberry<br>Diseases</h3>
<h4>Anthracnose<br>Powdery mildew<br>Spur blight<br>Fire blight<br>Gray mold <br>Phytophthora root rot<br>Late leaf rust<br>Raspberry leaf spot<br>Crown gall and cane gall<br>Verticillium wilt (bluestem) <br>Viral diseases<br>Pests</h4>
<h4>Rednecked cane borer<br>Redheaded flea beetle<br>Raspberry cane borer<br>Strawberry bud weevil<br>Raspberry fruitworm<br>Meadow vole (field mouse) <br>Strawberry root weevil<br>Potato leafhopper<br>Gall wasps<br>Crickets<br>Raspberry cane maggot<br>Four-spotted sap beetle (picnic beetle) <br>Aphids<br>Tarnished plant bug<br>European corn borer<br>Raspberry crown borer<br>Japanese beetles<br>Blackberry skeletonizer<br>Wireworms (Click beetles) <br>Raspberry sawfly<br>McDaniel spider mite</h4>
<h2><br>Blueberry Diseases and Pests</h2>
<h3>Phenological stages<br>Scouting table for the main blueberry pests<br>Diagnostic key for blueberry<br>Diseases</h3>
<h4>Anthracnose fruit rot<br>Powdery mildew<br>Twig blight<br>Gray mold <br>Stunt disease<br>Mummy berry<br>Witches’ broom<br>Leaf rust<br>Sooty blotch<br>Leaf spots<br>Crown gall<br>Viral diseases </h4>
<h3>Pests</h3>
<h4>Meadow vole (field mouse) <br>Blueberry midge<br>Heath spittlebug<br>White-tailed deer<br>Plum curculio<br>Redhumped caterpillar<br>Write-marked tussock moth<br>Fall webworm <br>Leafhoppers<br>Blueberry tip borer<br>Terminal borers<br>Ants<br>Blueberry stem gall wasp<br>June beetles<br>European fruit lecanium<br>Snowshoe hare<br>Slugs<br>Eastern tent caterpillar<br>Forest tent caterpillar<br>Blueberry leafminer<br>Blueberry maggot<br>Copper underwing (rear-humped caterpillar, pyramidal fruitworm moth) <br>Cherry fruitworm<br>Birds<br>European earwig<br>Lesser appleworm<br>Blueberry bud mite<br>Aphids<br>Cranberry fruitworm<br>Cecropia moth<br>Rose chafer<br>Japanese beetle<br>Click beetles (wireworms) <br>Oblique-banded leafroller</h4>
<h2><br>Beneficial Organisms</h2>
<h4>Predatory mites<br>Spiders<br>Green and brown lacewings<br>Lady beetles, ladybirds<br>Parasitoid wasps<br>European mantid<br>Predatory flies<br>Pollinators<br>Predatory bugs</h4><i><br>Glossary<br>References</i> </div>
<div><b>ProductAuthorEditor:</b> Liette Lambert, Odile Carisse, Ginette H. Laplante, and Charles Vincent</div>
<div><b>DisplayTitle:</b> Diseases, Pests, and Beneficial Organisms of Strawberry, Raspberry, and Blueberry</div>
<div><b>TabData:</b> 3,5</div>
<div><b>ProductItemNo:</b> 02301</div>
<div><b>ProductComment:</b> <span class=ms-rteCustom-Red10pt>NEW!</span></div>
]]></description>
      <author>Karen Ek</author>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2013 20:23:20 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=476</guid>
    </item>
  </channel>
</rss>