Studies on Graminicolous Species of Phyllachora Fckl. II.. Invasion of the host and development of the fungus

1963 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 131 ◽  
Author(s):  
DG Parbery

Infection of grasses by species of Phyllachora Fckl. has been observed, and a detailed examination of the life cycle of two species of this genus has been made on hosts artificially inoculated while growing under glass-house conditions. Gemiiiatiiig ascospores of P. ischaemi and P. parilis prodced appressoria on the leaves of their respective hosts, Ischaemum australe and Paspalurn orbiculare. From each appressorium an infection peg penetrated into the lumen of an epidermal cell and expanded into a normal hypha. Some branches of this hypha invaded adjacent epidermal cells, thus laying the foundations of the clypeus, while other branches invaded the underlying mesophyll cells. At first all hyphae were intracellular and passed from cell to cell by means of fine infection hyphae produced by appressorium-like swellings of the hyphae appressed to the cell wall. Intercellular mycelium was found at a later stage when hyphae were forming perithecium initials. The observation that the clypeus developed independently of the perithecium dispels some existing confusion about its origin. The clypeus developed in the epidermal cells of the host and not as an outgrowth of the ostiolar region of the perithecium. The perithecium initial developed deep in the mesophyll, and in the case of Phyllachora parilis was preceded by the formation of a subclypeal pycnidium containing filiform spores. In each case, the perithecium expanded until its ostiolar region came into close contact with the clypeus. The ostiole then developed right through the ciypeus, and its development is believed to be lysigenous. The mouth of the ostiole remained closed by a membrane which appeared to be the undissolved cuticle. It was noted that asci of all species examined possessed an ascus crown, a structure not previously observed in species of this genus. It has been found that the anatomy of the host can determine the form of some structures of Phyllachora spp. Clypeus thickness is governed by the size of the epidermal cells, while its radial expansion is checked by the mechanical tissue associated with vascular bundles. Similarly, perithecium size and shape are influenced by the amount of mechanical tissue in a leaf. The time for P. ischaemi to complete its life cycle was influenced by seasonal conditions. Colonies arising from infections in April 1961 discharged ascospores in 32 days, whereas infections made 1 month later did not produce sporulating colonies until 54-58 days later. The full life cycle of P. parilis took 62-77 days when inoculations were made in May 196 1.

2022 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 108054
Author(s):  
Xiaoshu Qin ◽  
Chang Peng ◽  
Gaozheng Zhao ◽  
Zengye Ju ◽  
Shanshan Lv ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 968 ◽  
pp. 218-221
Author(s):  
Xia Liu ◽  
Hong Qi Luo ◽  
Rui Fu ◽  
He Liang Song

Household electric blankets are widely used in China, but the problem of quality and safety is also more prominent, which is a serious threat to the health and safety of consumers. The structure characteristics and working principle of household electric blanket are analyzed. The hazards in the each stage of full life cycle are identified, including the stages of designing, manufacturing, packaging, transporting, utilizing and recycling. Hazard identification of each stage is made with methods of scenario analysis, safety check list, fault hypothesis analysis, hazard and operability analysis, failure mode and effect analysis and fault tree analysis, respectively.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (7) ◽  
pp. 1491-1498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mårten Åström ◽  
Willem Dekker

Abstract Åström M., and Dekker W. 2007. When will the eel recover? A full life-cycle model. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 64: 000–000: –. The European eel population has declined over the past decades in most of its distribution area, and the stock is outside safe biological limits. The EU has taken up the challenge to design a management system that ensures the escapement of 40% of spawning-stock biomass, relative to unexploited, unpolluted circumstances in unobstructed rivers. This ultimately aims to restore the spawning stock to a level at which glass eel production is not impaired, i.e. to restore to full historical glass eel recruitment. To explore the trajectory from the current depleted state to full recruitment recovery, we developed a simple model of stock dynamics, based on a simplified stock–recruitment relationship and the conventional dynamic pool assumptions. Recruitment trajectories under different future fishery regimes are explored, for the medium (one generation time) and long time-span (until full recruitment recovery). Reducing fisheries to zero, recovery is expected within ∼80 years, whereas under an ultimately sustainable fishing regime of just 10% of the current rate of fishing mortality, recovery may take more than 200 years. Moreover, management regimes, apparently leading to slight recovery of the stock in the coming 5–15 years, might still be unsustainable in the long run.


Author(s):  
Dominique Roddier ◽  
Christian Cermelli ◽  
Alexia Aubault ◽  
Antoine Peiffer

The WindFloat prototype is a semisubmersible type foundation supporting a 2 MW, 3 bladed, horizontal axis Vestas V-80 turbine. The 8-year project is near its completion. After 3 years of planning, engineering and fabrication, the prototype was installed in 2011 in the northern Portugal Atlantic waters. Following 5 years of operations and electricity production, the unit was decommissioned in the summer of 2016. This paper retraces the prototype project going back to the early objectives, focusing on its 5-year performance and lessons learned. The overall assessment of the impact of the prototype on the incoming pre-commercial projects is discussed. Some emphasis is placed on both the decommissioning of the unit and the economics of the project, as these have not yet been published.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Kennison

Officially launched just over a year ago, the Open Access Network (OAN)offers a transformative, sustainable, and scalable model of open access(OA) publishing and preservation that encourages partnerships amongscholarly societies, research libraries, and other partners (e.g., academicpublishers, university presses, collaborative e-archives) who share acommon mission to support the creation and distribution of open researchand scholarship and to encourage more affordable education, which can be adirect outcome of OA publishing. Our ultimate goal is to develop acollective funding approach that is fair and open and that fully sustainsthe infrastructure needed to support the full life-cycle for communicationof the scholarly record, including new and evolving forms of researchoutput. Simply put, we intend to *Make Knowledge Public*.


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