CucCAP
  • 
  • ESPAÑOL
  • About
    • Project Overview
    • Meet the CucCAP Project Team
    • Team Member Spotlight
    • Project Partners
  • Crop & Disease management
    • Cucumber Disease Management
    • Melon Disease Management
    • Squash Disease Management
    • Watermelon Disease Management
    • Integrated Disease Management
  • Breeding & Genomics
    • Development of Genomic Tools for Cucurbit Species
    • Cucurbit Genomics Database
    • Cucurbit Breeding
    • Breeding Cucumber for Disease Resistance
    • Breeding Melon for Disease Resistance
    • Breeding Squash for Disease Resistance
    • Breeding Watermelon for Disease Resistance
  • Publications
    • Research Publications
    • Research Presentations
    • Crop & Disease Management Publications
    • Extension and Industry Presentations
    • CucCAP Project Reports

Deer beat Powdery & Downy mildew for #1 vegetable pest

August 7, 2023December 1, 2023 cuccap

powdery mildew on squashThe American Vegetable Grower online magazine included wildlife pests for the first time in the 2023 production portion of the annual State of the Vegetable Industry survey. Deer bumped powdery mildew disease, the pest frontrunner in previous years, down the list.

Continue Reading

 

Cucurbit Crop & Disease Management Resources Cucurbit Downy Mildew, Powdery Mildew. permalink.

Post navigation

CucCAP scientists perform genome-wide association study to identify resistances to Pseudomonas leaf spot in watermelon
Michigan Cucurbit update | August 2, 2023
Search for:

Featured Article

CucCAP scientists use cucumber core collection to map fruit quality traits

The CucCAP core collection, comprised of 388 accessions representing >96% of the genetic diversity for cucumber present in the U.S. National Plant Germplasm System, harbors important sources of disease resistance. As sources of resistance are often present in germplasm with poor fruit quality, scientists from Michigan State University characterized the collection for fifteen fruit quality traits. Genetic associations (QTL) for each trait were identified from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Many of the genetic locations were in close vicinity to previously identified fruit trait QTL and candidate genes; several novel loci and genes potentially important for these traits were also identified.

For further reading:

Lin YC, Weng Y, Fei Z, Grumet R. 2025. Mining the cucumber core collection: phenotypic and genetic characterization of morphological diversity for fruit quality characteristics. Horticulture Research 12:uhae340.

 

News, Events, and the latest Cucurbit Disease Information

  • CucCAP Featured Articles
  • CucCAP Team Annual Reports
  • CucCAP Team News
  • Cucurbit Crop and Disease News
  • Upcoming Events
  • Cucurbit Disease Factsheets
  • Plant Disease Clinics
  • Field Trial Reports
USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

The Cucurbit Coordinated Agricultural Project (CucCAP) is a USDA-National Institute of Food and Agriculture Specialty Crop Research Initiative grant under award number
2020-51181-32139.

Cooperating Institutions:

Boyce Thompson Institute; Cornell University; Michigan State University; North Carolina State University; Clemson University; University of Puerto Rico; University of Wisconsin; University of Florida; University of Georgia; West Virginia State University; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service

CucCAP Newsletter

Contact Us

  • CucCAP LinkedIn Page
  • CucCAP YouTube Site
  • CucCAP Site map
  • Privacy Statement
© 2025 CucCAP. All rights reserved. Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress