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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Screening for resistance to Seiridium canker in the Cupressaceae and vegetative propagation of cypresses

Spanos, Konstantinos A. January 1995 (has links)
Artificial inoculations in the Cupressaceae proved that <I>Seiridium cardinale</I> was more virulent than <I>S.cupressi</I> and <I>S.unicorne. Cupressus macrocarpa</I> was found to be highly susceptible to <I>Seiridium</I> canker, <I>C.sempervirens</I> very susceptible, while <I>C.torulosa</I> and <I>C.arizonica</I> were moderately susceptible. <I>Chamaecyparis lawsoniana</I> was highly resistant to <I>S.cardinale</I>, but very susceptible to <I>S.unicorne</I> and moderately susceptible to <I>S.cupressi</I>. Intraspecific variation in susceptibility to <I>S.cardinale</I> was found in <I>C.sempervirens. S.cupressi</I> was more pathogenic than <I>S.unicorne</I> on <I>C.macrocarpa, C.arizonica</I> and <I>C.torulosa</I>, whereas it was less pathogenic on <I>C.sempervirens</I>. Mature bark proved to be more resistant to <I>Seiridium</I> canker than young bark. Low variability in pathogenicity of <I>S.cardinale</I> was found, with only one isolate out of eight proving to be a weaker pathogen. Histological examination of bark of cypress seedlings following infection with <I>S.cardinale</I> revealed the formation of strong necrophylactic periderm as an important resistance mechanism against <I>Seiridium</I> attack, and was particularly marked in <I>C.lawsoniana</I>. Strong necrophylactic periderms were detected in resistant and tolerant clones of <I>C.sempervirens</I>, whereas weak or a series of easily re-invaded ones were found in susceptible clones. Variations in pathogenicity of <I>Seiridium</I> in <I>in vitro</I> inoculations of micropropagated cypress shoots paralleled results found in the glasshouse. Wounding of micropropagated shoots significantly increased the size of lesions caused by all three <I>Seiridium</I> spp. In axenic conditions, hyphae of <I>Seiridium</I> spp. penetrated host tissues through stomatal apertures or directly through the cuticle. Under these conditions, infected tissues of <I>C.lawsoniana</I> formed ligno-suberized barriers as a result of fungal invasion, whereas those of <I>C.sempervirens</I> did not.

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