• Title/Summary/Keyword: Sclerotial fungi

Search Result 8, Processing Time 0.024 seconds

Morphological and Cultural Characteristics of Fungi Causing Rice Sclerotial Diseases (수도균핵병(水稻菌核病)을 일으키는 진균(眞菌)의 형태적(形態的) 및 배양적(培養的) 특성(特性))

  • Kim, Wan-Gyu
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
    • /
    • v.21 no.1
    • /
    • pp.16-22
    • /
    • 1993
  • Morphological and cultural characteristics of fungi causing rice sclerotial diseases were examined. Hyphal widths of R. solani and R. oryzae were same and ranged $6.0-12.0\;{\mu}m$ with average $9.0\;{\mu}m$, the widest among those of the sclerotial fungi examined. Hyphal width of R. oryzae sativae ranged $6.0-9.0{\mu}m$ with average $7.4{\mu}m$. Hyphal width of R. cerealis was the narrowest among those of Rhizoctonia species examined, and the same was hyphal width of S. oryzae among those of Sclerotium species. Nuclear staining by HCL-Giemsa method showed that R. solani and R. oryzae had many nuclei within one hyphal cell, S. oryzae one nucleus, and the other sclerotial fungi mostly two nuclei. The nuclear number of R. solani was the largest, which ranged 2-17 with average 6.3. Average size of sclerotia of the sclerotial fungi except S. hydrophilum and S. oryzae produced in lesions ranged 1.0-2.0mm. Average size of sclerotia of S. hydrophilum and S. oryzae was 0.5mm and 0.24mm, respectively. Sclerotia of R. solani and R. oryzae produced in culture were more variable in size and larger than those produced in lesions. However, the sclerotial sizes of the other sclerotial fungi produced in culture were almost the same as those produced in lesions. Sclerotial colors of sclerotial fungi produced in lesions were similar to those produced in culture, but sclerotial shapes of some sclerotial fungi exhibited somewhat difference between the sclerotia produced in lesions and in culture. Optimum temperature for mycelial growth of R. cerealis was $23^{\circ}C$, and that of the other sclerotial fungi ranged from $27\;to\;33^{\circ}C$. Maximum temperature for mycelial growth of some sclerotial fungi was as high as $41^{\circ}C$, while that of R. cerealis was as low as $31^{\circ}C$. Minimum temperature for mycelial growth of R. cerealis was $2^{\circ}C$, and that of the other sclerotial fungi ranged from $6\;to\;10^{\circ}C$.

  • PDF

Identification and Distribution of Two Fungal Species Causing Sclerotial Disease on Mulberry Fruits in Korea

  • Hong, Sung-Kee;Kim, Wan-Gyu;Sung, Gyoo-Byung;Nam, Sung-Hee
    • Mycobiology
    • /
    • v.35 no.2
    • /
    • pp.87-90
    • /
    • 2007
  • A total of 520 overwintered sclerotia were collected from surface of soil under mulberry trees in six locations in Korea during February in 2006 and 2007. The collected sclerotia were tested for their germination in vitro and identified based on their morphological characteristics. Out of all sclerotia tested, 52.3% of the sclerotia germinated and produced two types of apothecia. The two types of fungi occurred from the sclerotia at the ratio of 49.8 vs. 50.2. The fungal type with cup-shaped apothecia was identified as Ciboria shiraiana and another type of fungus with club-shaped apothecia as Scleromitrula shiraiana. Taxonomy and distribution of the two sclerotial fungi were described and discussed.

Effects of Colloidal Silver Nanoparticles on Sclerotium-Forming Phytopathogenic Fungi

  • Min, Ji-Seon;Kim, Kyoung-Su;Kim, Sang-Woo;Jung, Jin-Hee;Lamsal, Kabir;Kim, Seung-Bin;Jung, Moo-Young;Lee, Youn-Su
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
    • /
    • v.25 no.4
    • /
    • pp.376-380
    • /
    • 2009
  • Effects of silver nanoparticles on the phytopathogenic fungal growth were investigated. Fungal phytopathogens, especially for sclerotium-forming species Rhizoctonia solani, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and S. minor, were selected due to their important roles in survival and disease cycle. Tests for the fungal hyphal growth revealed that silver nanoparticles remarkably inhibit the hyphal growth in a dose-dependent manner. Different antimicrobial efficiency of the silver nanoparticle was observed among the fungi on their hyphal growth in the following order, R. solani > S. sclerotiorum > S. minor. Tests for the sclerotial germination growth revealed that the nanoparticles showed significant inhibition effectiveness. In particular, the sclerotial germination growth of S. sclerotiorum was most effectively inhibited at low concentrations of silver nanoparticles. A microscopic observation revealed that hyphae exposed to silver nanoparticles were severely damaged, resulting in the separation of layers of hyphal wall and collapse of hyphae. This study suggests the possibility to use silver nanoparticles as an alternative to pesticides for scleotium-forming phytopathogenic fungal controls.

Studies on the Identification of Pythium spp. and Sclerotial Fungi isolated from Rice plants in Korea (II) (수도(水稻)에 관여(關與)하는 Pythium spp와 균핵병균류(菌核病菌類)의 분류동정(分類同定)에 관(關)한 연구(硏究)(II))

  • Lee, Young-Hee;Lee, Eung-Kwon;Kim, Byung-Soo
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
    • /
    • v.6 no.2
    • /
    • pp.19-24
    • /
    • 1978
  • Four species of Pythium and two species of Sclerotium previously not recorded in Korea during 1976 and Leptosphaeria salvinii which previosly reported but reidentified. Pythium aristosporm Vantery, Pythium sp. and Pythium myriotylum Drechsler were isolated from diseased rice seedlings and from green withered rice plants and Pythium irreglare Buisman was isolated from paddy soil. Three species of Pythium except P. irregulare grew well at $40^{\circ}C$ on Potato dextrose agar and were confirmed as highly pathogenic but P. irregulare showed low pathogenicity on Yushin variety of rice. Sclerotium hydrophilum and Sclerotium oryzae-sativae appeared to be weakly pathogenic, but Leptosphaeria salvinii was confirmed as a highly pathogenic. Ordinally the two species of Sclerotium grew and produced many sclerotia on dead sheath and stems of rice. There are still some problems to clarify and reconsider in regard to the pathogenicity of the sclerotial fungi because their populations were so very high in paddy fields, but their role might be wound parasite.

  • PDF

Phenoloxidases and Photomorphogenesis in Coprinus congregatus (Coprinus congregatus의 분화와 Phenoloxidase와의 관계)

  • 최형태
    • Proceedings of the Botanical Society of Korea Conference
    • /
    • 1987.07a
    • /
    • pp.157-167
    • /
    • 1987
  • The have been many reports that phenoloxidase are correlated with development in many fungi. C. congregatus, one of nushroom-forming basidiomycetes, which requires light for its development also has phenoloxidases. In C. congragatus, there are two sets of membrane-associated phenoloxidase (PHO I and PHO II) which are differentiated by their isozyme patterns, and each enzyme set consists of two different subtrate specific enzyme protein; o-tolidine reacting enzyme, and DOPA reacting enzyme. PHO I which is localized by a protoplast-concanavalin A technique by using a new solidifying agent, Pluronic Polyol F 127, instead of agar appears in the vegetative hyphae, and PHO II appears at the early primordial stage on agar and at the sclerotial stage of liquid shake cultures. Inhibition of PHO I with the enzyme inhibitors inhibits mushroom formation as well as melanization of the vegetative hyphae at concentrations which do not inhibit the vegetative growth. PHO I deficient mutants do not form mushrooms or melanins, and the mutants show abnormal nuclear migration patterns. PHO II has roles; possibly cementing the adjacent hyphae during the actual three dimensonal structure formation, and melanizing mushrooms and sclerotia. The possible roles of PHO I in the light reception complex and in melanin formation, the function of malanin, and possible roles of postulated post translational modifying enzymes which regulate the phenoloxidases, nuclear migration pattern, and self-nonself recognition mechanism are discussed.

  • PDF

Gray Mold of Zinnia elegans Caused by Botrytis cinerea in Korea (Botrytis cinerea에 의한 백일홍 잿빛곰팡이병)

  • Kwon, Jin-Hyeuk;Son, Kyung-Ae;Jeong, Seon-Gi;Park, Chang-Seuk
    • Research in Plant Disease
    • /
    • v.10 no.4
    • /
    • pp.337-340
    • /
    • 2004
  • In April of 2003, the gray mold disease caused by Botrytis cinerea was occured in zinnia seedlings grown in greenhouse at Gyeongsangnam-do Agricultural Research and Extension Services, and farmer's nursery. The symptoms of infected plants were started with water-soaking lesions in flower bud, leaves and stems. The lesions gradually expanded and infected plants became withered and discolored to gray or dark from the tip. The conidia and mycelia of the pathogen were appeared on flowers, leaves and stem. The conidia were gray, 1-celled, mostly ellipsoid or ovoid in shape and were 5${\sim}$16 ${\times}$ 4${\sim}$8 ${\mu}m$ in size. Conidiophores were 12${\sim}$28 ${\mu}m$ in size. The pathogenic fungi formed sclerotia abundantly on potato dextrose agar. The optimum temperature for sclerotial formation was $20^{\circ}C$. Pathogenicity of the causal organism was proved according to Koch's postulate. The causal organism was identified as Botrytis cinerea Persoon: Fries based on mycological characteristics. This is the first report on gray mold of Zinnia elegans caused by Botrytis cinerea in Korea.

Studies on the Ecology of Occurrence and Identification of Typhula Snow Mold of Graminous Plants -II. Several Factors Affecting Growth of Typhula incarnata- (화본과식물에 발생하는 설부소입균핵병균(雪腐小粒菌核病菌)의 동정 및 발생상태에 관한 연구 -II. Typhula incarnata의 생육에 미치는 몇 가지 요인-)

  • Kim, Jin-Won;Lee, Du-Hyung;Shim, Gyu-Yul
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
    • /
    • v.20 no.1
    • /
    • pp.37-43
    • /
    • 1992
  • Typhula incarnata grew over a temperature range of -5 to $20^{\circ}C$ with maximum growth at 10 to $15^{\circ}C$. Sclerotial production for T. incarnata was greatest at the higher temperature. Maximum mycelial growth of this pathogen occurred from pH 5.4 to 6.2. When carbon sources were added to a basal salt medium (Czapek's dox agar) at 5 g carbon sources/l, inulin, soluble starch, galactose, glucose, mannose, manitol, sucrose, maltose, cellobirose, trehalose, raffinose, and dextrin supported growth better than other carbon sources did. Of the twenty-three nitrogen sources tested, glycine, serine, ammonium sulfate, asparagine, asparatic acid, and ${\beta}-alanine$ were the most favorable for mycelial growth of T. incarnata. Cystine and cysteine were poor nitrogen sources. Ammonium salt of nitrogen sources supported growth better than nitrate salt of nitrogen sources. Potato dextrose agar, oat meal agar, and V-8 juice agar were the most favorable for mycelial growth and sclerotial formation. Appropriate addition of pepton to PDA decreased mycelial dry weight, but sucrose supported good growth of T. incarnata. Percent viable sclerotia of T. incarnate buried in bentgrass soil decreased from 2 months after treatment remarkably. Trichoderma riride and bacteria were isolated from non-germinated sclerotia. Live orchard grass leaf pieces within the soil were colonized by T. incarnata better than sterile and unsterile dead leaf pieces at $0^{\circ}C$. Saprophytic ability of T. incarnate on sterile leaf sheath occurred better at $0^{\circ}C$ than at $10^{\circ}C$. Saprophytic microflora consisting of Cladosporium sp., Fusarium sp., Mucor sp., Pythium sp., and unidentified fungi were the competitors for the sterilized and unsterilized substrate, but their colonization was not find on live leaf sheath buried in the soil at $0^{\circ}C$. In the effect of fungicides to Typhula snow mold disease of creeping bentgrass, mixture of polyoxin and thiram was the most effective, followed by iprodione, mixture of iprodione and oxine copper, thiophanate-methyl, myclobutanil, and tolclofos-methyl.

  • PDF

First Report on the Shoot Blight Disease of Gaenari (Forsythia koreana) Caused by Septotinia sp. in Korea (Septotinia sp.에 의한 개나리 가지마름병(가칭) 발생)

  • Ji Hye Woo;Mikyeong Kim;Kun-Woo Lee;Sang-sup Han;Byeongjin Cha
    • Research in Plant Disease
    • /
    • v.29 no.3
    • /
    • pp.234-242
    • /
    • 2023
  • In early spring, water-soaked lesions appeared on the petals and leaves of gaenari (Forsythia koreana), and the tissues were necrotic and dry. Cankers appeared on the infected branches around late spring and the above part of a branch withered and died. However, it was very rare that the base of the cankered-branch died. The identical fungi were isolated from the lesions on various tissues, and they grew with white colonies on potato dextrose agar medium. The fungus grew most actively at 23℃ and produced many sclerotia of various sizes. In a pathogenicity assay in which mycelial and sclerotial suspensions were inoculated on each organ of forsythia, it was found that the pathogen infects the flower only, but not the leaves or branches. Symptoms on the flowers spread to the next leaves and branches over time and the infected branches were eventually withered. To identify the isolates, DNA sequences of four phylogenetic markers including ITS, LSU, Tub2, and CAL were analyzed and all isolates were identified as a species in the genus Septotinia. This is not only the first report of gaenari (forsythia) shoot blight caused by the fungus Septotinia sp., but also the first report on the genus Septotinia as a plant pathogen in Korea.