The Pests And Blights of the Tea Plant Being a Report of Investigations Conduct

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The Pests And Blights of the Tea Plant Being a Report of Investigations Conduct
George Watt
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Tea Pests and Blights. 177 Tea Fertilisers. 312. I have no faith in soil inoculation, so far as tea planting is concerned. But there are many more plants rich in root-warts besides the sou. The climbing and bushy species Dalbergia volubilis, D. Assamica and D. Stipulacea (medelod) are perhaps quite as good. Then again the sensitive plant has perhaps more root nodules than any other plant in Assam. Its thorns render it, however, impracticable except to sow on old nurseries and Assami village ste...rile plots. A crop of the sensitive plant would rapidly improve any land that there may be no occasion for coolies to walk over for some short time. The jungles of Assam contain many common species of leguminous plants such as Crotalaria striata, Des- modium polycarpum, Tephrosia Candida and Uraria crinita. These would grow as weeds on the tea land if sown and left alone for a month or two. The coolies treading on them while collecting the tea, would not materially hurt them, as they are hardy plants, and the Desmodium mentioned is procumbent.

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