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- Phylloxera - Wikipedia
The insect is commonly just called phylloxera ( f ɪ ˈ l ɒ k s ə r ə ; from Ancient Greek: φύλλον, leaf, and ξηρός, dry) These almost microscopic, pale yellow sap-sucking insects, related to aphids, feed on the roots and leaves of grapevines (depending on the phylloxera genetic strain)
- What is Grape Phylloxera | Wine Folly
Phylloxera is a microscopic louse or aphid, that lives on and eats roots of grapes It can infest a vineyard from the soles of vineyard worker’s boots or naturally spreading from vineyard-to-vineyard by proximity
- Phylloxera: A Grape Pest - SDSU Extension
Some grape growers may notice that some of their shoots have bumpy growths on the bottom of new leaves These bumps are galls caused by the grape phylloxera, an aphid-like insect
- What Is Phylloxera and How Did It Change Wine Forever? - SOMM TV
Phylloxera, or grape phylloxera, is a devastating vineyard disease caused by the tiny insect Daktulosphaira vitifoliae These minuscule yet menacing agents of destruction are aphids and belong to the family Phylloxeridae
- What Is Phylloxera And Why Is It Important? - terravenos. com
Phylloxera is an aphid-like insect (a louse) that feeds on grapevine roots, killing the grapevine The insect traveled from Eastern North America to Europe, devastating vineyards in the late 1800s
- Phylloxera In Napa Valley: Then and Now | Wine Enthusiast
This parasitic insect, phylloxera, had a monumental effect on the U S wine industry In the latter half of the 20 th century, it infiltrated Napa’s vineyards and changed how viticulturists in America’s most prominent wine region approach agriculture
- Grape Phylloxera Grape Agriculture: Pest Management Guidelines UC . . .
Grape phylloxera is a tiny aphidlike insect that feeds on roots of Vitis vinifera grape and certain rootstocks, stunting growth of vines or killing them
- The Complete Guide to Phylloxera - Wine-Searcher
Phylloxera is famous as the pest that destroyed vast areas of European vineyard in the 19th Century, almost wiping out some of the world's greatest wine regions As we reported earlier this month, it has now reared its head in the Washington subregion of Walla Walla; but what exactly is phylloxera?
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