نتایج جستجو برای: endophyte

تعداد نتایج: 1979  

2014
Otso Huitu Kristian M. Forbes Marjo Helander Riitta Julkunen-Tiitto Xavier Lambin Kari Saikkonen Peter Stuart Sini Sulkama Sue Hartley

Grasses have been considered to primarily employ tolerance in lieu of defense in mitigating damage caused by herbivory. Yet a number of mechanisms have been identified in grasses, which may deter feeding by grazers. These include enhanced silicon uptake, hosting of toxin-producing endophytic fungi and induction of secondary metabolites. While these mechanisms have been individually studied, the...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1998
C O Miles M E di Menna S W Jacobs I Garthwaite G A Lane R A Prestidge S L Marshall H H Wilkinson C L Schardl O J Ball G C Latch

Grazing of Echinopogon spp. by livestock in Australia has caused symptoms similar to those of perennial ryegrass staggers. We observed an endophytic fungus in the intercellular spaces of the leaves and seeds of New Zealand and Australian specimens of Echinopogon ovatus. Culture of surface-sterilized seeds from New Zealand specimens yielded a slow-growing fungus. An examination in which immunobl...

2013
María J. Ek-Ramos Wenqing Zhou César U. Valencia Josephine B. Antwi Lauren L. Kalns Gaylon D. Morgan David L. Kerns Gregory A. Sword

Studies of fungi in upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) cultivated in the United States have largely focused on monitoring and controlling plant pathogens. Given increasing interest in asymptomatic fungal endophytes as potential biological control agents, surveys are needed to better characterize their diversity, distribution patterns and possible applications in integrated pest management. We s...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 1995
J K Porter

Research on livestock toxicoses caused by Acremonium (endophyte)-infected grasses strongly implicate the ergopeptine alkaloids with A. coenophialum-infected fescue and paxilline and the lolitrem alkaloids with A. lolii-infected perennial ryegrass as the causative agents. Isolation, identification, and detection of these toxins involves extraction with appropriate solvents, clean-up procedures, ...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2013
K J McDowell E S Moore A G Parks L P Bush D W Horohov L M Lawrence

The hypotheses that endophyte (Neotyphodium coenophialum)-infected tall fescue (TF) seed causes vasoconstriction in horses in vivo and that ground seed would cause more pronounced vasoconstriction than whole seed were tested. Ten horses each received 1 of 3 treatments: endophyte-free ground (E-G; n = 4 horses) seed, endophyte-positive whole (E+W; n = 3) seed, or endophyte-positive ground (E+G; ...

2015
Y. Anny Chung Tom E. X. Miller Jennifer A. Rudgers

1. A potential driver of species abundance that remains understudied is the interaction between host species and their microbial symbionts. Beneficial symbionts could promote the dominance of common host species by increasing their population growth rates more than they do for rare species, and symbiont benefits could be important for maintaining rare species in communities. Alternatively, intr...

2015
Alyssa A. Carrell Anna C. Frank

The endophytic bacterial microbiome, with an emerging role in plant nutrient acquisition and stress tolerance, is much less studied in natural plant populations than in agricultural crops. In a previous study, we found consistent associations between trees in the pine family and acetic acid bacteria (AAB) occurring at high relative abundance inside their needles. Our objective here was to deter...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2007
Clara De Vega Pedro Luis Ortiz Montserrat Arista Salvador Talavera

BACKGROUND AND AIMS One of the most extreme manifestations of parasitism is found in the genus Cytinus, a holoparasite whose vegetative body is reduced to an endophytic system living within its host root. There are two species of Cytinus in the Mediterranean, C. hypocistis and C. ruber, which parasitize various genera of Cistaceae, one of the most characteristic families of the Mediterranean sc...

2014
Alyssa A. Carrell Anna C. Frank

Conifers predominantly occur on soils or in climates that are suboptimal for plant growth. This is generally attributed to symbioses with mycorrhizal fungi and to conifer adaptations, but recent experiments suggest that aboveground endophytic bacteria in conifers fix nitrogen (N) and affect host shoot tissue growth. Because most bacteria cannot be grown in the laboratory very little is known ab...

Journal: :Plant Signaling & Behavior 2008

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید