4 resultados para susceptible to virus infection

em Repositório Alice (Acesso Livre à Informação Científica da Embrapa / Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from Embrapa)


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In this study, we investigated the different responses of Spondias tuberosa (umbu) trees, which grow in two different ecological life zones in northeast Brazil: tropical wet and tropical arid ecosystems. We evaluated the responses of plants grown under humid and dry conditions by measuring the photosynthesis, water status, fluorescence parameters, carbon isotopes and antioxidant system activity. The higher net photosynthesis values were recorded contemporaneously with the lower VPD values. The highest internal-to-ambient CO2 concentration and the absence of typical changes in the fluorescence parameters suggested an onset of a nonstomatal limitation in the photosynthesis. Our results showed that umbu plants can adjust their antioxidant activity during the dry season as a defensive strategy against the deleterious effects of water stress. This evidence is supported by the observed modifications in the pigment concentrations, increased accumulation of hydrogen peroxide and malondialdehyde, high levels of electrolyte leakage, increased antioxidant activity, and decreased carbon isotope discrimination in the umbu trees during the dry season. Supported by multivariate analysis of variance, significantly effect of interaction between categorical months of collect and location predicts a strong ?dry season effect? on our dataset. Taken together, our data show that umbu trees grown in a wet tropical environment are more susceptible to drought, as compared with their tropical arid counterparts.

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Apples are commercially grown in Brazil in a subtropical environment that favors the development of fungal diseases such as Glomerella leaf spot (GLS) caused mainly by Glomerella cingulata (anamorph Colletotrichum gloeosporioides). The main objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of mixed infections by Apple stem grooving virus (ASGV) and Apple stem pitting virus (ASPV) on the infection and the colonization processes of C. gloeosporiodes in cv. Maxi Gala plants. Leaves of 16-month-old potted plants were spray-inoculated and both the disease incidence and lesion count were monitored over time and leaf severity was assessed in the final evaluation using an image analysis tool. Results showed that initial infection estimated from a monomolecular model fitted to progress of lesion count was higher and the incubation period (time to reach 50% incidence) was on average 10 h shorter in virus-infected plants compared to non-infected plants. It is hypothesized that initial events such as conidial germination and fungal penetration into plant cells were facilitated by the presence of viral infection. Also, final GLS severity was significantly higher in the virus-infected plants. Mixed infections by ASGV/ASPV seemed to make apple leaves more susceptible to the initial infection and colonization by C. gloeosporioides.

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RESUMO: O objetivo do presente trabalho foi avaliar a reação de genótipos de girassol à podridão branca, causada por Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, no colo e no capítulo, em condições de campo. Dezoito cultivares de girassol foram avaliadas, em experimento implantado em maio de 2014, em Mauá da Serra, PR, em condições de infecção natural do fungo. A avaliação das plantas indicou que a doença foi favorecida pelas condições climáticas de baixa temperatura e alta umidade, ocorrida na região na época de condução do experimento. Todos os genótipos de girassol avaliados foram suscetíveis a S. sclerotiorum. ABSTRACT: The objective of the present work was to evaluate the reaction of sunflower genotypes to Sclerotinia stalk and head rot, caused by Sclerotinia esclerotiorum. Eighteen cultivars were evaluated in a field experiments sowed in May 2014, in Maua da Serra, PR, Brazil, under natural infection in the field. The evaluation of the plants indicated that the disease was favored by the climatic conditions of low temperature and high humidity, which occurred in the region during the time of conducting the experiment. All sunflower genotypes tested are susceptible to Sclerotinia stalk and/or head rot.