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Plant pathogenic bacteria

open access: yes, 1994
Lemattre, M. (ed.)   +3 more
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Disturbing the plant pathogens

Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2020
A recent study suggests that anthropogenic disturbance of grasslands changes the sensitivity of plant pathogens to climate change.
openaire   +4 more sources

Trichoderma–plant–pathogen interactions

Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 2008
Abstract Biological control involves the use of beneficial organisms, their genes, and/or products, such as metabolites, that reduce the negative effects of plant pathogens and promote positive responses by the plant. Disease suppression, as mediated by biocontrol agents, is the consequence of the interactions between the plant, pathogens, and the ...
VINALE, FRANCESCO   +5 more
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Hemipterans as Plant Pathogens

Annual Review of Phytopathology, 2005
Integration of the tools of genetics, genomics, and biochemistry has provided new approaches for identifying genes responding to herbivory. As a result, a picture of the complexity of plant-defense signaling to different herbivore feeding guilds is emerging.
Isgouhi, Kaloshian, Linda L, Walling
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Fighting plant pathogens together

Science, 2019
![][1] A boxwood shrub shows the first signs of blight. PHOTO: JOHN GOLLOP/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO Boxwood, a cornerstone species of American gardens, is currently threatened by a blight pathogen, Calonectria pseudonaviculata . The first blight epidemics in North America were seen in North Carolina and Connecticut in 2011 ([ 1 ][2]).
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