The wet mould phytophthora infestans.
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Blight a disease that spread through potatoes
potato blight
no. it was a blight
no, oomycetes.
Yes protists cause disease , cause red tide, and the Irish potato famine Yes protists cause disease , cause red tide, and the Irish potato famine
The potato famine in Ireland which was caused by the potato blight killed in the region of 2 million people out of a pre-famine population of 9 million, and it started emigration to America, Canada, Australia and other places, displacing another one million during the famine, and many more since.
the Irish economy heavily depended on potatoes and a blight wiped out the potato crop in the 1840 creating wildespread famine
Most of the immigration was caused by the potato famine, but some were caused when their king had switched to a England church because of his marriage. That caused England to be in control of Ireland which left them weak. Another when the black plague had spread to them from England and the Irish were mad at them cause now, England had made most of their troubles.
The great Irish potato famine started in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in the years 1842 to 1852. There was mass starvation, which is estimated to of killed one million people. Many people also emigrated from Ireland because of the famine. Ireland's population is estimated to have decreased as much as 25 percent in just seven years. Historians now know the cause of the famine was a disease called potato blight. The famine was so great, because at the time nearly 33 percent of Ireland's population relied solely on potatoes for nourishment.
The cause was the Great Irish Potato Famine, a staple of the Irish diet.See related link below!
In 1840 The Great Famine happened, also known as the Potato famine. It was the cause of deaths for thousands of Irishmen and women.
The Irish Famine, often referred to as the Great Famine of 1845-1852, was primarily caused by a potato blight, a natural plant disease that devastated the staple crop of the Irish population. While the blight itself was a natural occurrence, the impact was exacerbated by social, political, and economic factors, including British colonial policies and land ownership structures that failed to provide adequate relief. Thus, while the initial cause was natural, the calamity's severity was intensified by human decisions and systemic failures, highlighting the interplay between natural disasters and societal vulnerabilities.