PROCEEDINGS: 1989 BELTWIDE COTTON RESEARCH CONFERENCES
Jan. 3-6, Nashville, TN
Editors
C. Paul Dugger & Debbie A. Richter

COTTON DISEASE COUNCIL
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Realizing the Promise of Biological Seed Treatments
G.E. Harman
15
Plant Response and Disease Control Following Seed Inoculation with Bacillus Subtilis
Paul A. Backman and John T. Turner, Jr.
16
Genetic Engineering of Cotton for Herbicide and Insect Resistance
JoAnne Fillatti, Carol McCall, Luca Comai, John Kiser, Kevin McBride, and Dave Stalker
17
USDA's Role in Regulating Genetically Engineered Organisms
A.S. Foudin and S. Shantharam
19
A Comparison of Sterol Metabolism in Mycelium of Phymatotrichum omnivorum and Pythium ultimum Treated with Penconazole and Propiconazole.
J.R. Anciso and S.D. Lyda
21
Purification and Partial Characterization of a Toxin from Sclerotia of Phymatotrichum omnivorum
J.C. Mabellos and Stuart D. Lyda
22
Genetic and Pathogenicity Differences among Several Isolates of Phymatotrichum omnivorum
J.L. Riggs and S.D. Lyda
23
Analysis of Growth and Yield of Greenhouse-Grown Cotton at Different Levels of Potassium
J. Cadena and S.D. Lyda
27
Response of Upland Cotton to Applications of Soluble Calcium
S.D. Lyda and J.L. Riggs
31
Development and Comparison of Three Selection Indices for High Yield Potential and Resistance to Phymatotrichum Root Rot in Cotton
C.G. Cook and K.M. El-Zik
33
Development of a Rapid Bioassay for Assaying Toxicity of Cotton Phytoalexins to Verticillium dahliae
R.D. Stipanovic, M.E. Mace, and M.H. Elissalde
36
Influence of Harvest Date on Aflatoxin Contamination of Cottonseed
Peter J. Cotty
36
A New Method for Artificial Deterioration of Cottonseed Using Methanol Stress
V.H. Hernandez, K. M. El-Zik, and J.M. Halloin
36
Colonization of Cotton Roots by pseudomonas
Donna P. Miller. William E. Batson, Jr., and Julio C. Borbon
37
Effectiveness of for Verticillium Wilt of Cotton and Seedling Diseases in Comparison with Foliar Sprays with Rally and Soil Treatment with Basamid-Granular
E.J. Paplomatas, R.J. Wakeman, B.L. Weir, R.H. Garber, and J.E. DeVay
37
Evaluation of Single and Multiple Fungicide Seed Treatments on the Emergence and Establishment of Texas High Plains Cotton
Norman Hopper, James Supak, and Harold Kaufman
37
Bacterial Blight Resistance Screen of Gossypium barbadense L. Germplasm and the Day-Neutral Conversion Status of Eight Resistant Accessions
Richard G. Percy and E. L. Turootte
38
Cotton Disease Reaction to Single Versus Mixed Inoculum of the HV Isolates of the Bacterial Blight Pathogen
T. P. Wallace and K. M. El-Zik
40
Further Evaluation of Effects of Selected Skip Levels in Stands and Replanting on Cotton Yields
Albert Y. Chambers
40
Effect of Potash on Verticillium Wilt, Yield, and Fiber Quality of Cotton
Earl B. Minton and M. Wayne Ebelhar
40
Effect of Nematode Infection on Various Morphological and Physiological Characteristics of Two Cotton Cultivars
T.L. Kirkpatrick, D.M. Oosterhuis, and S.D. Wullschleger
41
Effects of Genes Conditioning Interspecific Compatibility Between Gossypium hirsutum and Gossypium davidsonii on Resistance to Verticillium dahliae and Meloidogyne incognita
A.A. Bell and J.A. Veech
41
Increasing Cotton, (Gossypium Hirsutum), Resistance to the Root-Knot Nematode, Meloidogyne incognita, by Prior Inoculation of the Host with an Avirulent Race of the Nematode
Joseph A. Veech
41
Response of Four Root-Knot Nematode/fusarium Wilt Resistant Cotton Breeding Lines When Grown in a Field Infested with Both Meloidogyne incognita and Fusarium oxysporum F. Sp. vasinfectum
T.L. KirkPatrick and R.L. Shepherd
41
Engineering Cotton for Insect Resistance
David M. Anderson
DAGGER G Update after the First Year of Market Introduction
Mancer J. Cyr

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Document last modified Sunday, Dec 6 1998