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Interaction between Plants and Microorganisms: Microbial Biological Control Agents against Plant Pathogens

Research Journal of Biotechnology, 2023
Plant pathogenic bacteria are a substantial and long-term danger to food supply and environmental stability across the planet. With the increase in agricultural productivity in the last few decades, farmers are getting reliant on agrochemicals as a reasonably consistent means of crop protection. But increased use of chemical inputs has various negative
Aayushi Gaur   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

A Detached Leaf Assay for Rapidly Screening Plant Pathogen-Biological Control Agents

2022
The detached leaf assay (DLA) is a nondestructive method for evaluating interactions between plants and disease-causing agents that allows quick characterization of potential pathogens' infectivity and plants' resistance to them. Here we show its utility for also assessing potential biological control agents (BCAs), by demonstrating its applicability ...
Giovana Prado Fortuna, Macan   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Fungal pathogens as classical biological control agents against arthropods

BioControl, 2009
Fungal entomopathogens have been used more frequently than other types of pathogens for classical biological control. Among 136 programs using different groups of arthropod pathogens, 49.3% have introduced fungal pathogens (including both the traditional fungi and microsporidia).
Ann E. Hajek, Italo Delalibera
openaire   +1 more source

Biological Control Agents for Plant Pathogens

1996
Biological control of plant pathogens is fundamentally a matter of ecological management of a community of organisms, as is all biological control. In the case of plant pathogens, however, there are two distinctions from biological control of organisms such as insects and plants. First, the ecological management occurs at the microbial level, typically
Roy G. Van Driesche, Thomas S. Bellows
openaire   +1 more source

Pathogenicity of biological control agents for livestock ectoparasites: a simulation analysis

Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 2009
Abstract The management of arthropod ectoparasites of livestock currently relies largely on the use of neurotoxic chemicals. However, concerns over the development of resistance, as well as operator and environmental contamination, have stimulated research into alternative approaches to their control, including the use of biological ...
Rose, H, Wall, R
openaire   +3 more sources

Eco-friendly Agents for Biological Control of Pathogenic Diseases

Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening

Mohamed A. Dkhil, Rewaida Abdel-Gaber
openaire   +1 more source

Root bacterial endophytes as potential biological control agents against fungal rice pathogens

Archives of Phytopathology and Plant Protection, 2019
AbstractThe present work was carried out to investigate the potential of 100 rice endophytic bacteria for the biocontrol of five fungal rice pathogens in a controlled environment.
Hassan Etesami   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Search for Biological Control Agents against Plant Pathogens: A Pragmatic Approach

Biological Agriculture & Horticulture, 1986
(1986). The Search for Biological Control Agents against Plant Pathogens: A Pragmatic Approach. Biological Agriculture & Horticulture: Vol. 3, No. 2-3, pp. 317-327.
openaire   +1 more source

Features of Keeping Laboratory Animals Infected with Pathogenic Biological Agents, Pathogenicity Group I–II, under Experiment

Laboratornye Zhivotnye dlya nauchnych issledovanii (Laboratory Animals for Science)
Despite the advances made in the fight against infectious diseases, the incidence rate in the world remains high. The use of infected laboratory animals is an integral part of performing experimental and industrial biomedical research using pathogenic biological agents (PBA) I–II.
E.V. Kislitsina, V.G. Germanchuk
openaire   +1 more source

Evaluation of endemic fungal pathogens as biological control agents of Sporobolus spp.

2019
Within Australia, the Sporobolus indiens complex (Gramineae) consists of 22 entities. Two of these entities - S. indicus var major (Giant Parramatta Grass GPG) and S. pyramidalis (Giant Ratstail Grass GRTG) - are serious weeds of pasture in coastal areas of northern New South Wales and Queensland. A third entity, S.
openaire   +2 more sources

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