نتایج جستجو برای: symbiotic bacteria

تعداد نتایج: 188312  

Journal: :journal of arthropod-borne diseases 0
sanaz akbari 1department of microbiology, islamic azad university, damghan branch, damghan, iran. mohammadali oshaghi 2department of medical entomology and vector control, school of public health, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. saedehsadat hashemi-aghdam department of animal science, islamic azad university, damghan branch, damghan, iran. sara hajikhani department of pathology, school of public health, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. ghazaleh oshaghi department of nutrition, national nutrition and food technology research institute (nnftri), faculty of nutrition sciences and food technology, shahid beheshti university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. mohammadhasan shirazi department of pathology, school of public health, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran.

background : cockroaches mechanically spread pathogenic agents, however, little is known about their gut microbiota. identification of midgut microbial community helps targeting novel biological control strategies such as paratransgenesis. here the bacterial microbiota of periplaneta americana midgut, were identified and evaluated for finding proper paratransgenesis candidate. methods : midgut ...

Journal: :CoRR 2011
Serge Kernbach

Cooperation and competition among stand-alone swarm agents increase collective fitness of the whole system. A principally new kind of collective systems is demonstrated by some bacteria and fungi, when they build symbiotic organisms. Symbiotic life forms emerge new functional and self-developmental capabilities, which allow better survival of swarm agents in different environments. In this pape...

2016
Mohsin Tariq Sohail Hameed Muhammad Shahid Tahira Yasmeen Amanat Ali

Fungicides seed dressing provides benefits by preventing fungal infection, conversely, damage the non-target organisms including plant and its symbiotic bacteria. In this study, the effect of two fungicides, carbendazim and thiophanate methyl, was assessed on the growth of pea and its symbiotic bacteria, Rhizobium leguminosarum. In vitro studies revealed that recommended concentration of fungic...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Jacob A Russell Corrie S Moreau Benjamin Goldman-Huertas Mikiko Fujiwara David J Lohman Naomi E Pierce

Ants are a dominant feature of terrestrial ecosystems, yet we know little about the forces that drive their evolution. Recent findings illustrate that their diets range from herbivorous to predaceous, with "herbivores" feeding primarily on exudates from plants and sap-feeding insects. Persistence on these nitrogen-poor food sources raises the question of how ants obtain sufficient nutrition. To...

Journal: :Systematic and applied microbiology 2011
Marco A Rogel Ernesto Ormeño-Orrillo Esperanza Martinez Romero

Legume specificity is encoded in rhizobial genetic elements that may be transferred among species and genera. Dissemination (by lateral transfer) of gene assemblies dictating host range accounts for the existence of the same biological variant (biovar) in distinct microbiological species. Different alternative biovars may exist in a single species expanding their adaptation to different niches ...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2014
Manuel Martín-Vivaldi Juan J Soler Juan M Peralta-Sánchez Laura Arco Antonio M Martín-Platero Manuel Martínez-Bueno Magdalena Ruiz-Rodríguez Eva Valdivia

Animals live in a bacterial world, and detecting and exploring adaptations favouring mutualistic relationships with antibiotic-producing bacteria as a strategy to fight pathogens are of prime importance for evolutionary ecologists. Uropygial secretion of European hoopoes (Upupa epops, Linnaeus) contains antimicrobials from mutualistic bacteria that may be used to prevent embryo infection. Here,...

2014
Nathanael Delmotte Samuel Mondy Benoit Alunni Joel Fardoux Clémence Chaintreuil Julia A. Vorholt Eric Giraud Benjamin Gourion

Rhizobia are soil bacteria that are able to form symbiosis with plant hosts of the legume family. These associations result in the formation of organs, called nodules in which bacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen to the benefit of the plant. Most of our knowledge on the metabolism and the physiology of the bacteria during symbiosis derives from studying roots nodules of terrestrial plants. Here we...

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