Results 171 to 180 of about 2,676 (189)
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Basidiospore Formation byCeratobasidiumSp. on Agar
Mycologia, 1986Several Ceratobasidium isolates (binucleate Rhizoctonia solani-like fungi), all in anastomosis group 7 (CAG-7), developed basidiospores in axenic agar culture.
J. Y. Uchida, M. Aragaki, P. S. Yahata
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Vascular Streak Dieback (Ceratobasidium theobromae): History and Biology
2016Vascular streak dieback (VSD) caused by the basidiomycete, Ceratobasidium theobromae (syn. Oncobasidium theobromae, Thanatephorus theobromae), is one of the most important diseases of cacao in the Southeast Asian/Melanesian region, causing branch dieback with infections capable of killing seedlings and mature trees of susceptible cacao varieties.
Peter McMahon, Agus Purwantara
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Sectoring in cultures of Ceratobasidium cereale (Rhizoctonia cerealis)
Transactions of the British Mycological Society, 1988Fast-growing, brownish sectors appeared in the cultures of seven isolates of Ceratobasidium cereale incubated at 30 °C on NY-agar. These sectors acquired faster growth rate (21–27 mm/ day), higher optimum temperature (30°) and wider hyphae (6–8 μm) than their parent isolates. The sectors lost their capacity to anastomose with tester C.
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BioMetals, 2006
A novel trishydroxamate siderophore, named basidiochrome, was isolated as the principal siderophore from low-iron culture filtrates of Ceratobasidium and Rhizoctonia species which are known as mycorrhizal fungi associated with orchid roots. Ion-exchange chromatography and preparative HPLC yielded a pure compound which contained two components according
K, Haselwandter +7 more
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A novel trishydroxamate siderophore, named basidiochrome, was isolated as the principal siderophore from low-iron culture filtrates of Ceratobasidium and Rhizoctonia species which are known as mycorrhizal fungi associated with orchid roots. Ion-exchange chromatography and preparative HPLC yielded a pure compound which contained two components according
K, Haselwandter +7 more
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Two new Ceratobasidium species causing white thread blight on tropical plants in Brazil
Tropical Plant Pathology, 2018White thread blight is one of the most common diseases affecting several tree species that grow in warm and humid regions. The typical symptoms of this disease include blighted leaves hanging by a white thread of fungal hyphae. Leaf samples exhibiting white thread blight symptoms were collected from neem (Azadirachta indica A.
de Melo, Maruzanete P. +12 more
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Ceratobasidium obscurum: an atypical Thanatephorus species, misinterpreted as an orchid associate
Mycological Research, 1998The new combination Thanatephorus obscurus is proposed, based on a study of the type specimen of Ceratobasidium obscurum . The reports of this species as an orchid associate are based on misdeterminations. The unusual gelatinized basidiome of T. obscurus is discussed and compared with that of a new unnamed taxon from the Cameroon rain forest.
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NUCLEAR PHENOMENA IN THE BASIDIUM OF CERATOBASIDIUM PRATICOLUM (KOTILA) OLIVE
Canadian Journal of Botany, 1961The nuclear phenomena in the basidium of Ceratobasidium praticolum (Pellicularia praticola), studied by the Giemsa technique, are described and illustrated with photographs. The cells of the vegetative hyphae are multinucleate and those of the hymenia binucleate.
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Molecular evidence suggests that Ceratobasidium bicorne has an anamorph known as a conifer pathogen
Mycological Research, 2001In Finland and Norway, a uninucleate Rhizoctonia sp. is causing a root dieback disease on nursery-grown Norway spruce and Scots pine seedlings. This Rhizoctonia can be fruited under laboratory conditions and the basidial characters fit well in the species concept of Ceratobasidium bicorne, a species originally described as a moss parasite under forest ...
Hietala, A.M., Vahala, J., Hantula, J.
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NUCLEAR STRUCTURE AND DIVISION IN THE MYCELIUM AND BASIDIOSPORES OF CERATOBASIDIUM PRATICOLUM
Canadian Journal of Botany, 1961Nuclear structure and division in the mycelium and basidiospores of Ceratobasidium praticolum (Pellicularia praticola), studied in living and in differently stained preparations, are described and illustrated with photographs. The cells of the mycelium are multinucleate. Nuclear migration occurs from one cell to another through the septal pores.
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Mycologia, 1987
The teleomorph of Rhizoctonia oryzae-sativae is described as Ceratobasidium oryzae-sativae sp. nov. It differs from other known Ceratobasidium species because it has two sterigmata per basidium in conjunction with typically subglobose basidiospores. Ceratobasidium setariae comb. nov. (=Hypochnus setariae) is morphologically similar to C. oryzae-sativae.
Pamela S. Gunnell, Robert K. Webster
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The teleomorph of Rhizoctonia oryzae-sativae is described as Ceratobasidium oryzae-sativae sp. nov. It differs from other known Ceratobasidium species because it has two sterigmata per basidium in conjunction with typically subglobose basidiospores. Ceratobasidium setariae comb. nov. (=Hypochnus setariae) is morphologically similar to C. oryzae-sativae.
Pamela S. Gunnell, Robert K. Webster
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