0000000000092645

AUTHOR

M. G. Li Destri Nicosia

showing 3 related works from this author

Phytophthora palmivora a New Pathogen of Lavender in Italy

2019

Root rot caused by Phytophthora nicotianae is considered the most serious disease of lavender in commercial cultivations in Italy. In summer 2001, in the Gela area (Sicily), ≈60% of 34,000 2-year-old landscape shrubs of English lavender (L. angustifolia) grown in a clay loam soil showed symptoms of dieback associated with root rot. Plants had been transplanted from pots in May and watered using a trickle irrigation system. A species of Phytophthora was isolated consistently from roots of symptomatic plants using potato dextrose agar (PDA) containing benomyl, nystatin, pentachloronitrobenzene, rifampicin, ampicillin, and hymexazol. The species was identified as P. palmivora on the basis of …

biologySporangiumPhytophthora palmivoraBotanyRoot rotPotato dextrose agarPlant SciencePhytophthoraCultivarPhytophthora nicotianaebiology.organism_classificationAgronomy and Crop ScienceMyceliumPlant Disease
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First report of Phytophthora citrophthora causing fruit brown rot of Feijoa in Italy

2019

Feijoa (Feijoa sellowiana) is native to South America. In the early 20th Century it was introduced into Sicily (southern Italy), where it is grown as an ornamental plant and for its fruits. In 1985 a Phytophthora brown rot of feijoa fruits was reported in the province of Syracuse (eastern Sicily) (2). Several species of Phytophthora, including P. citricola, P. citrophthora, and P. nicotianae, were recovered from soil samples taken from trees with infected fruits. These species were experimentally inoculated on detached feijoa fruits and all incited symptoms of brown rot. However, only P. citricola was isolated from naturally infected fruits. In early autumn 1999, an outbreak of Phytophthor…

biologyFeijoa sellowianaPhytophthora citrophthoraInoculationBotanyOrnamental plantfood and beveragesOutbreakPlant SciencePhytophthorabiology.organism_classificationAgronomy and Crop Science
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Transposon tagging in the causal agent of olive anthracnose Colletotrichum sp

2006

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