Four maize cultivars were each separately inoculated with 10 different isolates of Diplodia zeae, Fusarium moniliforme, F. graminearum and Macrophomina phaseolina. D. zeae consistently caused most stalk rot, followed in decreasing order by M. phaseolina, F. graminearum and F. moniliforme. Significant intraspecific differences in stalk rot were recorded. No significant stalk rot x cultivar interaction occurred. Stalk rot correlated non‐significantly with yield loss but significantly with cellulase production in vitro.
Centre of the Cell is a unique biomedical science education centre, a widening participation and outreach project in London’s East End. This article describes Centre of the Cell’s first five years of operation, the evolution of the project in response to audience demand, and the impact of siting a major public engagement project within a research laboratory.
Maize roots were rapidly infected by soil inhabiting fungi as soon as they differentiated. The first tissues to develop were the seminal roots and mesocotyls. As their function became superseded by that of the adventitious roots, they rapidly became, completely rotted. Adventitious root rot developed slower and the roots did not become as severely rotted. Numerous fungi were isolated from the roots. The most frequently isolated were Helminthosporium pedicellatum and Fusarium moniliforme. Trichoderma sp. was the next most frequently isolated fungus; it was, however, significantly less frequently isolated than the above. Young and Kucharek (1977) found that the fungi isolated from maize roots occur in communities associated with certain plant growth stages. This was not clearly evident in this study. Numbers of root lesion nematodes (Pratylenchus species) correlated non‐significantly with fungus frequencies and root rot.
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