نتایج جستجو برای: white rot

تعداد نتایج: 189836  

Journal: :Journal of animal science 1992
H G Jung F R Valdez A R Abad R A Blanchette R D Hatfield

Five white rot basidiomycetes were evaluated for their potential to improve ruminal degradation of oat straw and alfalfa stems. Phanerochaete chrysosporium (PC), Scytinostroma galactinum (SG), Phlebia tremellosa (PT), Phellinus pini (PP), and Pholiota mutabilis (PM) were incubated on oat straw and alfalfa stems for 30 d at 28 degrees C and 90% relative humidity. Detergent fiber and total fiber ...

Journal: :به نژادی نهال و بذر 0
مهدی نصراصفهانی m. nasr esfahani agricultural and natural resources research center of isfahan, isfahan, iran.مرکز تحقیقات کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی اصفهان منصوره حسینی کوپائی m. hosseini koupaee کرج

one of the growth limiting factors of onion plants is root and basal plate rot disease, caused by fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae. in this research, eight iranian onion genotypes, azarshahr red, ghom white, herssin, isfahan dorcheh, kashan white, nishabour ishaghabad, yazd abarkoh, zanjan gholigheseh and two commercial genotypes, texas erly grano and yellow sweet spanish were investigated. geno...

2014
Li-Wei Zhou Yu-Lian Wei Yu-Cheng Dai

White-rot and brown-rot fungi employ different mechanisms to degrade lignocellulose. These fungi are not monophyletic and even alternate in their common lineage. To explore the reason for this, seventy-six ligninolytic peroxidases (LPs), including 14 sequences newly identified from available basidiomycetous whole-genome and EST databases in this study, were utilized for phylogenetic and selecti...

2017
K. P. Roopa P. U. Krishnaraj

Groundnut or peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is one of the important economic oilseed crops of the world. The cultivated groundnut belongs to family Fabaceae, subfamily Papilionaceae. Groundnut is grown in nearly 100 countries. It occupies 21.7 million ha worldwide with a total production of 38.6 million tonnes during 2011 (FAOSTAT, 2011). Among the soil-borne fungal diseases of groundnut, stem ro...

1997
Robert A. Blanchette Todd A. Burnes Gary F. Leatham Marilyn J. Effland R. A. Blanchette T. A. Burnes G. F. Leatham M. J. Effland

Different rates of wood decay and ligninolytic activity were found in wood decayed by various white-rot fimgi. Chemical and ultrastructural analyses showed wood decayed by Coriolus versicolor consisted of a nonselective attack on all cell wall components. Lignin degradation was restricted to the cell wall adjacent to hyphae or around the circumference of cell lumina. Decay by Phellinus pini, Ph...

Journal: :Indian journal of experimental biology 2003
K Murugesan P T Kalaichelvan

Synthetic dyes are integral part of many industrial products. The effluents generated from textile dyeing units create major environmental problems and issues both in public and textile units. Industrial wastewater treatment is one of the major problems in the present scenario. Though, the physical and chemical methods offer some solutions to the problems, it is not affordable by the unit opera...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2000
C A Jasalavich A Ostrofsky J Jellison

We have developed a DNA-based assay to reliably detect brown rot and white rot fungi in wood at different stages of decay. DNA, isolated by a series of CTAB (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) and organic extractions, was amplified by the PCR using published universal primers and basidiomycete-specific primers derived from ribosomal DNA sequences. We surveyed 14 species of wood-decaying basidiomyc...

2016
Christin Anderson Glenn Juday

Mycoremediation is a cleanup technique within the larger field of bioremediation. In this literature review, the history, species and methods of mycoremediation are investigated. The literature suggests that many fungi have the ability to degrade a wide variety of pollutants. The functional group white-rot fungi have previously been shown to biodegrade petroleum using extracellular enzymes, and...

Journal: :Mycologia 2011
Ricardo Garcia-Sandoval Zheng Wang Manfred Binder David S Hibbett

The Gloeophyllales is a recently described order of Agaricomycotina containing a morphologically diverse array of polypores (Gloeophyllum), agarics (Neolentinus, Heliocybe) and resupinate fungi (Veluti-Veluticeps, Boreostereum, Chaetodermella), most of which have been demonstrated to produce a brown-rot mode of wood decay and are found preferentially on coniferous substrates. Multiple phylogene...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید