نتایج جستجو برای: nematode and fungus simultaneously

تعداد نتایج: 16838054  

Journal: :Journal of nematology 1993
A F Bird M H Ryder

Information on the effect of bacteria-feeding nematodes on bacterial populations in the soil is sparse. We have isolated, cultured, and microscopically examined bacteria and nematodes coexisting within an agricultural soil and have studied their feeding relationship. The bacterium Pseudomonas corrugata isolate 2140R is a biocontrol agent against the pathogenic fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis var...

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2011
María Federica Sagüés Peter Purslow Silvina Fernández Luis Fusé Lucía Iglesias Carlos Saumell

The control of gastrointestinal nematodes relies at present mostly on antihelmintic treatments using synthetic molecules. This approach, however, has led to the appearance of resistance to some types of antihelmintics which, together with the need to cut down on the use of chemicals, has fostered the development of other control methods, such as biological control, which is the use of living or...

2017
Yen-Ping Hsueh Matthew R Gronquist Erich M Schwarz Ravi David Nath Ching-Han Lee Shalha Gharib Frank C Schroeder Paul W Sternberg

To study the molecular basis for predator-prey coevolution, we investigated how Caenorhabditis elegans responds to the predatory fungus Arthrobotrys oligospora. C. elegans and other nematodes were attracted to volatile compounds produced by A. oligospora. Gas-chromatographic mass-spectral analyses of A. oligospora-derived volatile metabolites identified several odors mimicking food cues attract...

Journal: :WormBook : the online review of C. elegans biology 2005
Creg Darby

A wide variety of bacterial pathogens, as well as several fungi, kill C. elegans or produce non-lethal disease symptoms. This allows the nematode to be used as a simple, tractable model host for infectious disease. Human pathogens that affect C. elegans include gram-negative bacteria of genera Burkholderia, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, Serratia and Yersinia; gram-positive bacteria Enterococcus, Sta...

Journal: :Journal of nematology 1986
G S Smith R S Hussey R W Roncadori

The influence of the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices (Gi) and superphosphate (P) on penetration, development, and reproduction of Meloidogyne incognita (Mi) was studied on the Mi-susceptible cotton cultivar Stoneville 213 in an environmental chamber at 28 C. Plants were inoculated with Mi eggs at planting or after 28 days and destructively sampled 7, 14, 21, and 28 d...

Journal: :Veterinary research 2005
Carine Paraud Hervé Hoste Yves Lefrileux Alain Pommaret Virginie Paolini Isabelle Pors Christophe Chartier

The ability of the nematophagous fungus Duddingtonia flagrans to reduce the number of infective nematode larvae in coproculture was investigated in goats using different doses of chlamydospores (0, 1.25 x 10(5), 2.5 x 10(5), 5 x 10(5) chlamydospores/kg BW/day) given by oral administration or by voluntary consumption in feed during natural or experimental infections with nematodes. The kinetics ...

Journal: :Journal of nematology 2007
Michael V McKenry Safdar A Anwar

Harmony grape rootstock displays resistance to several Meloidogyne spp. but that resistance is not durable in commercial vineyard settings. A 2-year experiment in a microplot setting revealed host specificities of two virulent populations of Meloidogyne arenaria and an avirulent population of Meloidogyne incognita. In a subsequent split-root experiment, the avirulent nematode population was dem...

2010
EDNA M. BUHRER Ross W. Davidson

The first observation of Aphelenchoides xylophilus, n.sp., the timber nema, dates back to 1929, when a small piece of wood that had been cut, in the process of roofing, from the top of a green pole of longleaf Louisiana pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) was received from Orange, Tex.^ This piece of wood had streaks of a bluish color caused by blue-stain fungi. The nemas were found in these streaks a...

Journal: :Journal of nematology 1991
A G El-Sherif M A Elwakil

Agrobacterium tumefaciens stimulated and Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici inhibited development and reproduction of Meloidogyne incognita when applied to the opposite split root of tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum cv. Tropic, plants. The lowest rate of nematode reproduction occurred after 2,000 juveniles were applied and the fungus was present in the opposite split root. The effects of all ...

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