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Fungal Disease Tolerance with a Focus on Wheat: A Review. [PDF]
Maulenbay A, Rsaliyev A.
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2021
Net blotches are the most widely distributed foliar diseases of barley worldwide, causing significant losses in grain yield. They occur as net form net blotch, caused by Pyrenophora teres f. teres and spot form net blotch caused by P. teres f. maculata. Both sexual and asexual reproduction play a role in the P.
Anke Martin +3 more
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Net blotches are the most widely distributed foliar diseases of barley worldwide, causing significant losses in grain yield. They occur as net form net blotch, caused by Pyrenophora teres f. teres and spot form net blotch caused by P. teres f. maculata. Both sexual and asexual reproduction play a role in the P.
Anke Martin +3 more
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Spring barley accessions with dual spot blotch and net blotch resistance
Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology, 2008Spot blotch and net blotch are common foliar diseases of barley in the upper midwestern United States and are capable of causing significant reductions in both the yield and quality of the crop. Currently, there are no cultivars grown in the region that possess high levels of resistance to net blotch, and recent evidence suggests that the durable spot ...
Thomas G. Fetch +3 more
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Sensitivity of Resistance to Net Blotch in Barley
Journal of Phytopathology, 1999The aim of this study was to demonstrate various methods of analysing terminal net blotch, Pyrenophora teres Drechs. f. teres Smedeg., severity data from 15 spring barleys, Hordeum vulgare L., grown in Finnish official variety trials in five environments.
Robinson, Jonathan, Jalli, Marja
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Interaction of net blotch and scald on barley
Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology, 2008Abstract Net blotch caused by Pyrenophora teres f. sp. teres and scald caused by Rhynchosporium secalis are major foliar diseases of barley (Hordeum vulgare) and often occur together in the same fields in central Alberta, Canada. The differential development of these two diseases in relation to seeding date was investigated in five field trials in 2001
K. Xi +5 more
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Field screening for resistance to barley net blotch
Annals of Applied Biology, 1987SUMMARYInoculation with barley net blotch from infested straw debris was compared with that from diseased plants after sowing infected grains. The straw debris had a high, uniform inoculation potential which gave an early, continuing infection and easily reproducible results that were effective for screening barley cultivars in the field for resistance
J. P. SKOU, V. HAAHR
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Quantitative genetics of net blotch resistance in barley
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1985Abstract A half diallel was made amongst 5 barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) genotypes (Zephyr, Hassan, Mata, Kaniere, and Manchuria) which varied in resistance to net blotch disease, caused by the fungus Drechslera teres (Sacc.) Shoem. The 5 parents and 10 F1 progeny were grown to physiological maturity in a controlled environment.
G. B. Douglas, I. L. Gordon
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Net blotch resistance in wild species of Hordeum
Euphytica, 1997Resistance to net blotch was evaluated in 175 Hordeum vulgare subsp. spontaneum (H. spontaneum) accessions and 149 accessions of thirteen species or subspecies of wild Hordeum. Most H. spontaneum accessions showed resistance to each of the four Pyrenophora teres f. teres (P. teres) isolates tested. However, H.
Kazuhiro Sato, Kazuyoshi Takeda
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Diseases affecting barley: net blotches
2018This chapter reviews the current knowledge of spot form and net form of net blotch of barley with an emphasis on recent genetic studies and their contribution to our understanding of the range of host-pathogen genetic interactions. Principal differences between the two forms of the disease are explained together with common cultural control methods. An
Simon R. Ellwood, Hugh Wallwork
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Mapping quantitative trait loci associated with barley net blotch resistance
Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 2007Net blotch of barley, caused by Pyrenophora teres Drechs., is an important foliar disease worldwide. Deployment of resistant cultivars is the most economic and eco-friendly control method. This report describes mapping of quantitative trait loci (QTL) associated with net blotch resistance in a doubled-haploid (DH) barley population using diversity ...
T S, Grewal +3 more
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