992 resultados para Plantas hospedeiras


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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Botânica) - IBB

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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In Brazil the knowledge about the geographical distribution and host plants of whiteflies (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) is limited, mainly on crops. In this communication, the occurrence of Aleurodicus mirabilis (Cockerell, 1898) in high infestations in custard apple (Annona squamosa Linnaeus, 1753) is recorded in the state of São Paulo, Brazil.

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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Entomologia Agrícola) - FCAV

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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Entomologia Agrícola) - FCAV

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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The spatial and temporal distribution of the population reflects the adjustment of their biological characteristics to environmental conditions and biotic interactions as adaptive and phylogenetic precursors elements. The habitat’s heterogeneity and alternating seasons tend to cause patterns of activity of organisms and species diversity. However, these seasonal and spatial patterns in butterfly communities in dry environments are not yet clear. We studied a community of frugivorous butterflies in ESEC Seridó, in northeastern Brazil, aiming to characterize the guild in semiarid and check the relative contribution of climate and vegetation variables on its composition, diversity and phenofaunistic. The butterflies were sampled monthly during one year, and the distribution of species was associated with structural characteristics of three vegetation types (eg. richness and abundance of tree and shrub species, canopy cover, herbaceous cover, litter) and climatological data (temperature, rainfall and humidity). We captured 9580 individuals of 16 species of butterflies belonging to four subfamilies (Biblidinae, Charaxinae, Nymphalinae and Satyrinae). The richness, abundance and diversity varied in different scales, especially in time, being higher in the rainy season, while the β-diversity and turnover was higher in the dry. The distribution of species mainly followed the changes in humidity, rainfall and vegetation phenology, with no defined boundaries between habitats. The flight period was shared within subfamilies, which should have distinct response to environmental stimuli, as well as respond to the phenology of host plants and have different reproductive strategies. There is even evidence of physiological and behavioral adaptations as seasonal reproduction and aestivation. So there was environmental control over the distribution and diversity of species, with the key role climate Association and vegetation structure in the community of differentiation in the seasons, and the availability and quality of resources on the variation of species abundance in small scales. These results may support the biomonitoring and conservation preserved areas, particularly in environments under human pressure and extreme environmental conditions such as semi-arid.

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Ink Disease is considered one of the most important causes of the decline of chestnut orchards. The break in yield of Castanea sativa Mill is caused by two species: Phytophthora cinnamomi and Phytophthora cambivora, being the first one the foremost pathogen of ink disease in Portugal. P. cinnamomi is one of the most aggressive and widespread plant pathogen with nearly 1,000 host species. This oomycete causes enormous economic losses and it is responsible for the decline of many plant species in Europe and worldwide. Up to now no efficient treatments are available to fight these pathogens. Because of the importance of chestnut at economical and ecological levels, especially in Portugal, it becomes essential to explore the molecular mechanisms that determine the interaction between Phytophthora species and host plants through the study of proteins GIP (glucanase inhibitor protein) and NPP1 (necrosis-inducing Phytophthora protein 1) produced by P. cinnamomi during the infection. The technique of RNA interference was used to knockdown the gip gene of P. cinnamomi. Transformants obtained with the silenced gene have been used to infect C. sativa, in order to determine the effect of gene silencing on the plant phenotype. To know more about the function of GIP and NPP1 involved in the mechanism of infection, the ORF’s of gip and npp1 genes have been cloned to the pTOR-eGFP vector for a future observation of P. cinnamomi transformants with fluorescent microscopy and determination of the subcellular localization. Moreover the prediction by bioinformatics tools indicates that both GIP and NPP1 proteins are secreted. The results allow to predict the secretory destination of both GIP and NPP1 proteins and confirm RNAi as a potential alternative biological tool in the control and management of P. cinnamomi. Keywords:

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Programação. Resumo das palestras. Sessões: Biodiversidade e taxonomia; Ciências ômicas; Fixação biológica de nitrogênio em não-leguminosas; Coquetéis de microrganismos para um buffet de plantas e possibilidades; Estratégias para a obtenção de plantas hospedeiras com maior capacidade de FBN; Quantificando e qualificando a FBN; Planejando o futuro: difusão e transferência de tecnologias e formação de recursos humanos; Soja: o carro-chefe da FBN na América do Sul; A FBN em culturas de menor impacto econômico e grande importância social e ambiental; Indústria e negócios. Pôsters: Biodiversidade e taxonomia, evolução e ecologia de rizobactérias; Genética e genômica de rizobactérias e leguminosas; Fisiologia e bioquímica de rizobactérias e leguminosas; Interações associativas e endofíticas planta/rizobactérias; Aspectos agronômicos relacionados a bactérias fixadoras do nitrogênio e promotoras do crescimento de plantas; Tecnologias em inoculantes e inoculação; Ensino, difusão e transferência de tecnologia.

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The extent of the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest, a global biodiversity hotspot, has been reduced to less than 7% of its original range. Yet, it contains one of the richest butterfly fauna in the world. Butterflies are commonly used as environmental indicators, mostly because of their strict association with host plants, microclimate and resource availability. This research describes diversity, composition and species richness of frugivorous butterflies in a forest fragment in the Brazilian Northeast. It compares communities in different physiognomies and seasons. The climate in the study area is classified as tropical rainy, with two well defined seasons. Butterfly captures were made with 60 Van Someren-Rydon traps, randomly located within six different habitat units (10 traps per unit) that varied from very open (e.g. coconut plantation) to forest interior. Sampling was made between January and December 2008, for five days each month. I captured 12090 individuals from 32 species. The most abundant species were Taygetis laches, Opsiphanes invirae and Hamadryas februa, which accounted for 70% of all captures. Similarity analysis identified two main groups, one of species associated with open or disturbed areas and a second by species associated with shaded areas. There was a strong seasonal component in species composition, with less species and lower abundance in the dry season and more species and higher abundance in the rainy season. K-means analysis indicates that choice of habitat units overestimated faunal perceptions, suggesting less distinct units. The species Taygetis virgilia, Hamadryas chloe, Callicore pygas e Morpho achilles were associated with less disturbed habitats, while Yphthimoides sp, Historis odius, H. acheronta, Hamadryas feronia e Siderone marthesia likey indicate open or disturbed habitats. This research brings important information for conservation of frugivorous butterflies, and will serve as baseline for future projects in environmental monitoring

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O gênero Verticillium apresenta duas importantes espécies de fitopatógenos (V. dahliae e V. albo-atrum). A capacidade de produção de microescleródios dos isolados de V. dahliae em cultura tem sido empregada como a principal característica para distinção destas duas espécies. Verticillium dahliae é um fungo bastante polífago, amplamente disseminado no território brasileiro, causando murcha vascular em tomate, berinjela, jiló, algodão, morango, cacau, quiabo, dentre outras hospedeiras. Verticillium dahliae apresenta especialização fisiológica em tomateiro tendo sido descritas duas raças. O presente trabalho teve por objetivo investigar a capacidade de isolados de V. dahliae em infectar e causar doença em plantas de diversas famílias botânicas. Para avaliação da gama de hospedeiros, quatro isolados do fungo foram inoculados em 62 acessos de 54 espécies em 40 gêneros e 18 famílias botânicas. A maioria dos acessos mostrou-se susceptível ao patógeno. Foram classificadas como plantas não-hospedeiras todas as gramíneas avaliadas, as solanáceas Datura stramonium, Nicandra physaloides e Physalis ?oridana, couve-flor (linhagem CNPH-003), melancia (cv. Crimson Sweet), melão (cv. Eldorado 300) alface (cvs. Regina e Robinson), cenoura, feijão, soja-verde, beterraba, maracujá azedo (Passi?ora edulis), capuchinha (Trapaeolum majus) e cariru (Talinum triangulare). Foram identificadas 27 novas hospedeiras experimentais de V. dahliae.

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Realizaram-se levantamentos de plantas daninhas, no Campus da UNESP em Jaboticabal/SP, com o objetivo de identificar espécies de plantas daninhas hospedeiras do tripes Frankliniella schultzei (Trybom). As plantas foram coletadas semanalmente utilizando-se o método de ensacamento. A separação dos tripes foi feita mediante emprego do funil de Berlese. Entre as 43 espécies de plantas daninhas encontradas nas áreas amostradas, 19 são hospedeiras do tripes. Rabanete (Raphanus sativus L.), nabiça (R. raphanistrum L.) e mostarda (Sinapsis arvensis L.) foram as que apresentaram as maiores porcentagens de F. schultzei, 45, 27 e 17% do total de fêmeas coletadas respectivamente.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)