Publication | Closed Access
Pathogenic behaviour of Cephalosporium maydis and C. acremonium
49
Citations
1
References
1970
Year
BiologyPrimary ParasiteBotanyFungal PathogenNatural SciencesPathogenesisCrop ProtectionC. AcremoniumPathologyOomycetePlant PathologyFungal BiologyMicrobiologyPlant HealthMedicinePlant-pathogen InteractionParasitologyPlants Age
SUMMARY Cephalosporium maydis infects young maize plants easily, but as plants age fewer are infected and none after approx. 50 days from sowing. The mesocotyl and seminal, fibrous and adventitious roots are attacked, especially when there is damage or much inoculum. Most penetration occurs where roots are elongating and emerge from the mesocotyl or from fibrous roots. At first the fungus grows superficially on roots, producing hyphae with short, brown, thick‐walled, and swollen cells. After penetrating, the fungus spreads towards the xylem, where it grows slowly at first but after 5 weeks grows faster upwards. C. acremonium causes black‐bundle disease of maize. It seems to infect plants growing in unfavourable conditions but the details remain uncertain. The percentage of plants infected was not related to the amount of inoculum and the fungus may not be a primary parasite. The sterile culture filtrate of the fungus produces vascular discoloration and wilt of maize seedlings.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1