10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «NECROTROPH»
Discover the use of
necrotroph in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
necrotroph and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Plant Relationships: A Comprehensive Treatise on Fungi As ...
Traditionally they are grouped into the major classes necrotroph/ hemi-biotroph/
biotroph, according to major criteria like their source of nutrition (living vs dead
cells), their ability to infect young and healthy tissue or a preference to older or ...
2
Fine-tuning Plant Defense Signaling: Regulation and Function ...
Indeed, in Chapter 2 it is shown that trade-offs between SA-dependent resistance
against a biotroph and JA-dependent resistance against a necrotroph only occur
when these pathogens were in close proximity to each other. In this case ...
3
Arabidopsis 2010 and beyond – big science with a small weed
required for defense toward this necrotroph remains fragmentary, and in many
cases is also affected by the pathogen isolate (Ferrari et al., 2007; Llorente et al.,
2008; Pieterse et al., 2009; Rowe et al., 2010; Lazniewska et al., 2010; El Oirdi et
...
4
Advances in Botanical Research
TABLE V Hypothetical cellular interactions of symbioses between a plant and a
micro-organism Interaction Microbiont phenotype Phytobionta Necrotroph
Compatible None; killedb Suppressed; killed Non-self; suicidec Incompatible
Non-self; ...
5
Agricultural Applications
Necrotroph. A. Biology and Infection Strategy Botrytis cinerea Pers.: Fr.
Botryotinia fuckeliana (de Bary) Whetz. is a necrotrophic ascomycete that causes
disease in at least 235 plant species (Jarvis 1977) resulting in considerable
economic ...
Karl Esser, Paul A. Lemke, F. Kempken,
2002
6
Abiotic Stress Adaptation in Plants
(2008) demonstrated that a DELLA quadruple mutant is more susceptible to the
necrotroph pathogen Alternaria brassicicola and more resistant to the biotroph
pathogen PSTDC3000. Interestingly, Navarro et al. (2008) could correlate the ...
7
Plant Pathology: Concepts and Laboratory Exercises
Disease symptoms caused by necrotrophs are manifested as small to very large
patches of dead, blackened, or sunken tissue. A classic example of a necrotroph
is the fungal pathogen Monilinia fructicola, which causes brown rot of peaches.
Mark T. Windham, Robert N. Trigiano, Alan S. Windham,
2004
8
Counter-figures: An Essay on Anti-metaphoric Resistance. ...
The term coined here, “necro-tropho-logical”, is a combination of three roots:
necrology, of course, and also necrotroph (“necrotroph, n. / Plant pathol[ogy] / A
plant parasite, esp. a fungus, that feeds on dead tissue of its host.”), and
trophology ...
9
Encyclopedia of Microbiology
by necrotrophs often appear blackened or sunken. An example of a necrotroph is
Monilinia fructicola, which causes brown rot of peaches. Finally, the
hemibiotrophs function as both a biotroph and a necrotroph during the life cycle.
At first ...
10
XIII Conference "Root and Butt Rot of Forest Trees" IUFRO ...
Heterobasidion annosum, the root and butt rot pathogen of conifer trees can live
as a saprotroph on dead wood and as a necrotroph on a living tree. The question
is what kinds of genes play important roles during the transitional shift from one ...
Paolo Capretti, C. Comparini, M. Garbelotto,
2013