نتایج جستجو برای: puccinia graminis fsp tritici

تعداد نتایج: 4183  

Journal: :Selcuk journal of agriculture and food sciences 2021

Stem rust caused by Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici is an important disease of wheat in the world. This also common Sinop province Turkey. The pathogen forms new races and these may overcome resistance present cultivars. For sustainable production, identification stem necessary. During 2016 2017, surveys were conducted wheat-growing areas from diseased plants, 42 single uredospore pustule isol...

Journal: :Molecular plant pathology 2005
Kurt J Leonard Les J Szabo

UNLABELLED SUMMARY Stem rust has been a serious disease of wheat, barley, oat and rye, as well as various important grasses including timothy, tall fescue and perennial ryegrass. The stem rust fungus, Puccinia graminis, is functionally an obligate biotroph. Although the fungus can be cultured with difficulty on artificial media, cultures grow slowly and upon subculturing they develop abnormal p...

Journal: :Journal of applied genetics 2001
J Chełkowski L Stepień

Over 100 genes of resistance to rust fungi: Puccinia recondita f. sp. tritici, (47 Lr - leaf rust genes), P. striiformis (18 Yr - yellow rust genes) and P. graminis f. sp. tritici (41 Sr - stripe rust genes) have been identified in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and its wild relatives according to recent papers. Sixteen Lr resistance genes have been mapped using restriction fragments length polym...

2008
Mohamed Mergoum Richard C. Frohberg Robert W. Stack Jack W. Rasmussen Timothy L. Friesen

224 Journal of Plant Registrations, Vol 2, No. 3, September 2008 ‘Faller’ (Reg. No. CV-1026, PI 648350) hard red spring wheat (HRSW) (Triticum aestivum L.) was tested as experimental line ND805, developed at North Dakota State University (NDSU), and released by the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station (NDAES). In addition to researchers at NDSU, USDA-ARS researchers at Fargo, ND, contri...

2008
Jin Y

Race Ug99 of Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici, recognized for possessing virulence to Sr31, was first reported in Uganda in 1999 (Pretorius et al., 2000). Based on the North American stem rust nomenclature system of 16 differential lines (Roelfs and Martens, 1988; Roelfs et al., 1993), Ug99 is identified as race TTKS (Wanyera et al., 2006). Isolates with virulence similar to Ug99 were identifie...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2003
R R Bélanger Nicole Benhamou J G Menzies

ABSTRACT Silicon (Si) amendments in the form of exogenously supplied nutrient solution or calcium silicate slag protect wheat plants from powdery mildew disease caused by the fungus Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici. The most striking difference between Si- and Si+ plants challenged with B. graminis f. sp. tritici was the extent of epidermal cell infection and colonization by B. graminis f. sp. ...

2009
Jinbiao Ma Xianming Chen Meinan Wang Zhensheng Kang

The wheat stripe rust fungus, Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst), does not have a known alternate host for sexual reproduction, which makes it impossible to study gene linkages through classic genetic and molecular mapping approaches. In this study, we compared 4,219 Pst expression sequence tags (ESTs) to the genomic sequence of P. graminis f. sp. tritici (Pgt), the wheat stem rust fungu...

2017
Long-Xi Yu Shiaoman Chao Ravi P Singh Mark E Sorrells

Wheat stem rust (Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici Eriks. and E. Henn.) is one of the most destructive diseases world-wide. Races belonging to Ug99 (or TTKSK) continue to cause crop losses in East Africa and threaten global wheat production. Developing and deploying wheat varieties with multiple race-specific genes or complex adult plant resistance is necessary to achieve durability. In the pres...

2015
Laura H. Okagaki Cristiano C. Nunes Joshua Sailsbery Brent Clay Doug Brown Titus John Yeonyee Oh Nelson Young Michael Fitzgerald Brian J. Haas Qiandong Zeng Sarah Young Xian Adiconis Lin Fan Joshua Z. Levin Thomas K. Mitchell Patricia A. Okubara Mark L. Farman Linda M. Kohn Bruce Birren Li-Jun Ma Ralph A. Dean

Magnaporthaceae is a family of ascomycetes that includes three fungi of great economic importance: Magnaporthe oryzae, Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici, and Magnaporthe poae. These three fungi cause widespread disease and loss in cereal and grass crops, including rice blast disease (M. oryzae), take-all disease in wheat and other grasses (G. graminis), and summer patch disease in turf grass...

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