نتایج جستجو برای: sclerotia

تعداد نتایج: 441  

Journal: :Mycologia 2004
Cesaria E McAlpin

The ability of Aspergillus caelatus, a species in Aspergillus section Flavi, to produce synnemata and sclerotia was investigated. Forty-eight isolates of A. caelatus differed widely in their production of synnemata and sclerotia; 83% of the isolates produced varying numbers of synnemata and sclerotia, and 17% produced neither sclerotia nor synnemata. Most strains produced synnemata and mostly s...

2015
Anzilni F. Amasya Kazuhiko Narisawa Makiko Watanabe

We herein investigated sclerotia that were obtained from cool-temperate forests in Mt. Chokai and Mt. Iwaki in north Japan and tentatively identified as the resting bodies of Cenococcum geophilum. The profiles of sclerotia-associated fungal communities were obtained through T-RFLP combined with clone library techniques. Our results showed that sclerotia in Mt. Chokai and Mt. Iwaki were predomin...

2007
Sung Kee Hong Wan Gyu Kim Gyoo Byung Sung Sung Hee Nam

A total of 520 overwintered sclerotia were collected from surface of soil under mulberry trees in six locations in Korea during February in 2006 and 2007. The collected sclerotia were tested for their germination in vitro and identified based on their morphological characteristics. Out of all sclerotia tested, 52.3% of the sclerotia germinated and produced two types of apothecia. The two types ...

2006
Toshiyuki KUBO Susumu TERABAYASHI Shuichi TAKEDA Hiroshi SASAKI Masaki ABURADA Ken - ichi MIYAMOTO

Poria cocos WOLF), belonging to the Polyporaceae in basidiomycetes, forms sclerotia on the roots of such trees as pine, cedar, fir and oak. The major host plant of this fungus in Japan, China and Korea is the pine and the dried sclerotium of W. cocos is called “Bukuryo” in Japanese. In the Japanese Pharmacopoeia, the external layer is usually mostly removed. It is one of the most important crud...

2016
Bruce W. Horn Richard M. Gell Rakhi Singh Ronald B. Sorensen Ignazio Carbone Stefanie Pöggeler

Aspergillus flavus colonizes agricultural commodities worldwide and contaminates them with carcinogenic aflatoxins. The high genetic diversity of A. flavus populations is largely due to sexual reproduction characterized by the formation of ascospore-bearing ascocarps embedded within sclerotia. A. flavus is heterothallic and laboratory crosses between strains of the opposite mating type produce ...

2017
Xixi Zhao Joseph E. Spraker Jin Woo Bok Thomas Velk Zhu-Mei He Nancy P. Keller

Aspergillus flavus is a saprophytic soil fungus that poses a serious threat worldwide as it contaminates many food and feed crops with the carcinogenic mycotoxin called aflatoxin. This pathogen persists as sclerotia in the soil which enables fungal survival in harsh environmental conditions. Sclerotia formation by A. flavus depends on successful cell communication and hyphal fusion events. Loss...

2017
Bing Li Xiaofang Tian Chunlan Wang Xu Zeng Yongmei Xing Hong Ling Wanqiang Yin Lixia Tian Zhixia Meng Jihui Zhang Shunxing Guo

Understanding the initiation and maturing mechanisms is important for rational manipulating sclerotia differentiation and growth from hypha of Polyporus umbellatus. Proteomes in P. umbellatus sclerotia and hyphae at initial, developmental and mature phases were studied. 1391 proteins were identified by nano-liquid chromatograph-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) in Data Dependant Acquisition mode, and 1...

Journal: :Phytopathology 1997
R K Garber P J Cotty

ABSTRACT Aspergillus flavus can be divided into the S and L strains on the basis of sclerotial morphology. On average, S strain isolates produce greater quantities of aflatoxins than do L strain isolates. Sclerotia of the S strain were observed in commercial seed cotton from western Arizona. Greenhouse tests were performed to better define sclerotial formation in developing bolls. Eight S strai...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2008
B M Wu K V Subbarao Y-B Liu

Survival of sclerotia of Sclerotinia minor and S. sclerotiorum was compared in irrigated fields during the summer in two major lettuce production areas in California. More than 50% sclerotia of S. sclerotiorum compared with 4 and 35% of S. minor remained viable after 24 weeks of burial at 15 and 5 cm depths, respectively, in the San Joaquin Valley while >80% of sclerotia survived in the Salinas...

2010
C. J. KING E. D. EATON

The fungus Phymatotrichum omnivorum (Shear) Duggar, the cause of cotton root rot, has three known stages in its life history, namely, (i) a vegetative or Ozonium stage (^),^ (2) a conidial or Phymatotrichum stage {!), and {S) a sclerotial stage (4). Several investigators have shown that the sclerotia, or hold-over bodies, are usually present in the soil wherever the disease is found, and play a...

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