نتایج جستجو برای: rhynchosporium

تعداد نتایج: 125  

Journal: :Mycologia 2011
Pascal L Zaffarano Bruce A McDonald Celeste C Linde

Rhynchosporium consists of two species, R. secalis and R. orthosporum. Both are pathogens of grasses with R. secalis infecting a variety of Poaceae hosts and R. orthosporum infecting Dactylis glomerata. Phylogenetic analyses of multilocus DNA sequence data on R. secalis isolates originating from cultivated barley, rye, triticale and other grasses, including Agropyron spp., Bromus diandrus and H...

2013
Kevin M. King Jonathan S. West Patrick C. Brunner Paul S. Dyer Bruce D. L. Fitt

The fungal genus Rhynchosporium (causative agent of leaf blotch) contains several host-specialised species, including R. commune (colonising barley and brome-grass), R. agropyri (couch-grass), R. secalis (rye and triticale) and the more distantly related R. orthosporum (cocksfoot). This study used molecular fingerprinting, multilocus DNA sequence data, conidial morphology, host range tests and ...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2009
Pascal L Zaffarano Bruce A McDonald Celeste C Linde

A phylogeographical analysis of the scald pathogen Rhynchosporium secalis was conducted using nuclear DNA sequences from two neutral restriction fragment length polymorphism loci and the mating-type idiomorphs. Approximately 500 isolates sampled from more than 60 field populations from five continents were analysed to infer migration patterns and the demographic history of the fungus. Migration...

Journal: :Plant protection 2022

Rhynchosporium is a wide spread disease in the regions of winter rye cultivation. The paper demonstrates results monitoring occurrence and development phytopathogene crop Republic Belarus for 2019-2020.

2014
Nichola J. Hawkins Hans J. Cools Helge Sierotzki Michael W. Shaw Wolfgang Knogge Steven L. Kelly Diane E. Kelly Bart A. Fraaije

Evolution of resistance to drugs and pesticides poses a serious threat to human health and agricultural production. CYP51 encodes the target site of azole fungicides, widely used clinically and in agriculture. Azole resistance can evolve due to point mutations or overexpression of CYP51, and previous studies have shown that fungicide-resistant alleles have arisen by de novo mutation. Paralogs C...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2008
Pascal L Zaffarano Bruce A McDonald Celeste C Linde

Agriculture played a significant role in increasing the number of pathogen species and in expanding their geographic range during the last 10,000 years. We tested the hypothesis that a fungal pathogen of cereals and grasses emerged at the time of domestication of cereals in the Fertile Crescent and subsequently speciated after adaptation to its hosts. Rhynchosporium secalis, originally describe...

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