Identification and Pathogenicity of the Fungus Isolated from Butt Rot of Japanese Cypress, Chamaecyparis obtusa
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Butt rot of Japanese cypress, Chamaecypqris obtusa, in three 25-year-old stands with 178, 70 and 45 trees caused 69.1%, 75.7% and 76.1% of the respective stands to rot. In the field survey, corticioid basidiocarps with yellowish hymenia were sometimes observed on the cut ends of trunks and cut surface of stumps of C. obtusa and a few species of hardwoods. These basidiocarps were identified as Phlebia chrysocrea by morphological studies. The isolates were classified into six groups based on their colony characteristics. The basidiocarp isplates belonged to one of six groups. The isolates from C. obtusa proved to be P. chrysocrea by mating experiments. In inoculation experiments, P. chrysocrea was pathogenic to C. obtusa.
- 日本植物病理学会の論文
- 2001-11-25
著者
-
MAEKAWA Nitaro
The Tottori Mycological Institute
-
KUBAYASHI Takashi
Nagasaki Prefecture Government, Goto Branch Bureau
-
Maekawa N
Fungus/mushroom Resource And Research Center Faculty Of Agriculture Tottori University
-
Kubayashi Takashi
Nagasaki Perfecture Government Goto Branch Bureau
関連論文
- Specific detection of a basidiomycete, Phlebia brevispora associated with butt rot of Chamaecyparis obtusa, by PCR-based analysis
- Corticioid fungi (Basidiomycota) in mangrove forests of the islands of Iriomote and Okinawa, Japan
- Identification of the basidiomycetous fungus isolated from butt rot of the Japanese cypress
- Detection of fungi producing infection-inhibiting metabolites against Alternaria alternata Japanese pear pathotype from fungi inhabiting internal tissues of Japanese pear shoots
- Isolation of a homothallic mutant in Lentinula edodes
- Asterostroma species (Basidiomycota) from mangrove forests in Japan
- Identification and Pathogenicity of the Fungus Isolated from Butt Rot of Japanese Cypress, Chamaecyparis obtusa
- Taxonomic study of Japanese Corticiaceae (Aphyllophorales) VII
- Pseudolagarobasidium calcareum : Japanese records and cultural characteristics
- Biotransformation of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin by Coprinellus species
- Functional analysis of the melanin biosynthesis genes ALM1 and BRM2-1 in the tomato pathotype of Alternaria alternata
- The genus Ponticulomyces (Physalacriaceae, Agaricales) from Japan