PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Amy Steigman
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: asteigman@scisoc.org
Having Cranberries This Thanksgiving? If So,
You Have Plant Health Scientists To Thank
St. Paul, MN (November 21, 2000) - Cranberries will be plentiful this
holiday season thanks to nearly one hundred years of research by plant
pathologists. Found growing in peat bogs and marshes by the first
colonists to arrive from Europe, cranberries were quickly incorporated
into their diets. Native Americans used them to make pemmican, a mixture
of dried meat or fish and berries and they were the first to make them
into a sweetened sauce using maple sugar. Cranberries were also used as a
poultice for wounds and when mixed with cornmeal created an excellent cure
for blood poisoning. The juice was even used as a dye to brighten the
colors of blankets and rugs.
In 1816, Henry Hall, a Revolutionary War veteran, was the first person to
cultivate cranberries. He transplanted them from the wild near his home on
Cape Cod and by 1820 was shipping them to Boston and New York City.
As demand for cranberries grew and the number of growers and production
acreage increased, so too did disease problems. In the late 1800’s,
cranberry fruit rot disease devastated harvests. “This was a time when
plant pathology (the study of plant diseases) was in its infancy and data
implicating fungi or bacteria as disease-causing agents were sparse,”
according to Frank Caruso, plant pathologist, University of Massachusetts,
and member of the largest group of plant health scientists, The American
Phytopathological Society (APS).
Another disease, false-blossom disease, nearly wiped out cranberry culture
in New Jersey and caused major problems in Massachusetts during the 1920’s
and 1930’s. Ongoing research by plant pathologists helped tackle these
diseases and today there is little loss from false-blossom and other
diseases.
As one of only three major fruits native to North America and, most
historians agree, part of that first historic Thanksgiving meal, it’s
nice to know that the heritage of the cranberry continues.
You can find out more about cranberry history and production in North
America by visiting the November 2000 feature page of the APSnet
website at www.apsnet.org/online/feature/cranberry/. The
American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional
scientific organization dedicated to the study and control of plant
disease with 5,000 members worldwide.
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