نتایج جستجو برای: airborne fungal spores

تعداد نتایج: 84123  

2012
Mayuree Jaisai Sunandan Baruah Joydeep Dutta

Paper with antimicrobial properties was developed through in situ growth of ZnO nanorods. The targeted application for this type of paper is in health centers as wallpaper, writing paper, facemasks, tissue paper, etc. The paper was tested on three model microbes, Gram-positive bacteria Staphylococcus aureus, Gram-negative bacteria Escherichia coli and common airborne fungus Aspergillus niger. N...

Journal: :Research in microbiology 2011
Andreas Wargenau André Fleissner Christoph Josef Bolten Manfred Rohde Ingo Kampen Arno Kwade

The electrostatic surface potential of fungal spores is generally regarded as potentially influencing spore aggregation and pellet formation in submerged cultures of filamentous fungi. Spores of Aspergillus niger are typically characterized by negative zeta potentials over a wide range of pH values. In this study, this particular behavior is ascribed to the presence of an extensive melanin coat...

2015
Andreas Floren Dirk Krüger Tobias Müller Marcus Dittrich Renate Rudloff Björn Hoppe Karl Eduard Linsenmair Petr Karlovsky

Freshly cut beech deadwood was enriched in the canopy and on the ground in three cultural landscapes in Germany (Swabian Alb, Hainich-Dün, Schorfheide-Chorin) in order to analyse the diversity, distribution and interaction of wood-inhabiting fungi and beetles. After two years of wood decay 83 MOTUs (Molecular Operational Taxonomic Units) from 28 wood samples were identified. Flight Interception...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1975
D E Aylor J Y Parlange

Particles are blown from leaves when the wind at the height of the particles exceeds a minimum which is about 5 m/sec for some fungal spores. In the moderate winds typical within a canopy of leaves, the minimum is attained at spore height during brief changes in wind or puffs before the boundary layer grows to particle height. The requisite change in speed to remove spores occurs over a sizeabl...

Journal: :Environmental Health Perspectives 1986
M S Palmgren L S Lee

Two distinct reservoirs of mycotoxins exist in fungal-infected cereal grains--the fungal spores and the spore-free mycelium-substrate matrix. Many fungal spores are of respirable size and the mycelium-substrate matrix can be pulverized to form particles of respirable size during routine handling of grain. In order to determine the contribution of each source to the level of mycotoxin contaminat...

Journal: :The Annals of occupational hygiene 2004
Karen H Bartlett Susan M Kennedy Michael Brauer Chris Van Netten Barbara Dill

Exposure to airborne fungal products may be associated with health effects ranging from non-specific irritation of the respiratory tract or mucus membranes to inflammation provoked by specific fungal antigens. While concentrations of airborne fungi are frequently measured in indoor air quality investigations, the significance of these measurements in the absence of visual mold colonization is u...

2016
Anne Mette Madsen Søren T. Larsen Ismo K. Koponen Kirsten I. Kling Afnan Barooni Dorina Gabriela Karottki Kira Tendal Peder Wolkoff

In the indoor environment, people are exposed to several fungal species. Evident dampness is associated with increased respiratory symptoms. To examine the immune responses associated with fungal exposure, mice are often exposed to a single species grown on an agar medium. The aim of this study was to develop an inhalation exposure system to be able to examine responses in mice exposed to mixed...

Journal: :Archives of Microbiology 2021

Airborne fungi are one of the major components aeromycobiota known to produce several fungal diseases in fruits. Their presence indoor environment warehouses may limit storage period apples. Qualitative and quantitative analyses airborne spores were conducted using gravity settling techniques detect airspora present atmosphere two apple Tunisia. In this study, 375 isolates obtained purified. Ph...

Journal: :Applied microbiology 1970
J I Pitt J H Christian

An improved viable counting technique was developed to facilitate study of the heat resistance of fungal spores. Spores were heated and subsequently incubated in the same medium. After germination, hyphae and germ tubes were stained with lactofuchsin, and the germinated spores were counted with the aid of a microscope. A number of xerophilic strains were examined, mostly isolates from spoiled h...

Journal: :Mycologia 2005
J M Flores I Gutiérrez R Espejo

Chalkbrood in honeybees (Apis mellifera L. Himenoptera: Apidae) is a fungal disease caused by Ascosphaera apis (Maassen ex Claussen) Olive and Spiltoir. This disease requires the presence of fungal spores and a predisposing condition in the susceptible brood for the disease to develop. In this study we examined the role of pollen in the development of chalkbrood disease under two experimental c...

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