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Screening for alternative hosts of Phytophthora clandestina

Screening for alternative hosts of Phytophthora clandestina R.G. Clarke and F.C. Greenhalgh Plant Research Institute Department of Agriculture and Rural AffaIrs Burnley, Victoria 3121 In Victoria, root diseases markedly reduce the Plant species which developed root rot In the productivity of subterranean clover (Trifolium soil mix were tested further in a liquid culture subterraneum L.) (1,5) and the recently experiment. Four-day-old mats of mycelium 01 P. discovered fungus, Phytophthora ctenaesttne clandestina grown in LBB at 25°C were washed in Taylor, Pascoe and Greenhalgh (4) has been SDW and incubated in sterile pond water (1 Implicated as the cause of severe rotting of the mat/petri-dish) for 16 hours at 20"C. The tap root of this legume (2). The fungus has also seedlings were produced aseptically as been detected on rotted roots of subterranean described by Taylor et al (4). Care was taken to clover at widespread locations In Western avoid contact between the mat and seedlngs in Australia (3), New South Wales and South each dish so that infection was by zoospores. Five Australia (6), and therefore could be an important replicates were prepared for each plant species. pathogen in these states. After two weeks the tip of the tap root of each rots of other pasture http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australasian Plant Pathology Springer Journals

Screening for alternative hosts of Phytophthora clandestina

Australasian Plant Pathology , Volume 15 (3) – Feb 28, 2011

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References (6)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright
Subject
Life Sciences; Plant Pathology; Plant Sciences; Agriculture; Entomology; Ecology
ISSN
0815-3191
eISSN
1448-6032
DOI
10.1071/APP9860061
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

R.G. Clarke and F.C. Greenhalgh Plant Research Institute Department of Agriculture and Rural AffaIrs Burnley, Victoria 3121 In Victoria, root diseases markedly reduce the Plant species which developed root rot In the productivity of subterranean clover (Trifolium soil mix were tested further in a liquid culture subterraneum L.) (1,5) and the recently experiment. Four-day-old mats of mycelium 01 P. discovered fungus, Phytophthora ctenaesttne clandestina grown in LBB at 25°C were washed in Taylor, Pascoe and Greenhalgh (4) has been SDW and incubated in sterile pond water (1 Implicated as the cause of severe rotting of the mat/petri-dish) for 16 hours at 20"C. The tap root of this legume (2). The fungus has also seedlings were produced aseptically as been detected on rotted roots of subterranean described by Taylor et al (4). Care was taken to clover at widespread locations In Western avoid contact between the mat and seedlngs in Australia (3), New South Wales and South each dish so that infection was by zoospores. Five Australia (6), and therefore could be an important replicates were prepared for each plant species. pathogen in these states. After two weeks the tip of the tap root of each rots of other pasture

Journal

Australasian Plant PathologySpringer Journals

Published: Feb 28, 2011

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