Fungal infection of plants :
Pegg, G.F.
Fungal infection of plants : symposium of the British Mycological Society / Edited by G.F. Pegg & Peter G. Ayres - Cambridge, New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011. - xiii, 428 p.: ill.; 23 cm
1. Specificity of active resistance mechanisms in plant-fungus interactions J. J. G. M. De Wit 2. Specificity and recognition in ectomycorrhizal associations J. A. Duddridge 3. Spores on leaves: endogenous and exogenous control of development John Lucas and Ian Knights 4. Pathways for the exchange of materials in mycoparasitic and plant-fungal interactions Peter Jeffries 5. Induced modifications in the plasma membranes of infected cells J. L. Gay and A. M. Woods; 6. Nutrient relations in biotrophic infections J. F. Farrar and D. H. Lewis 7. Some aspects of fungal enzymes that degrade cell walls J. P. R. Keon , R. J. W. Bryde and R. M. Cooper 8. The role of fungal toxins in plant disease Herman W. Knoche and Jonathan P. Duvick 9. Antifungal substances from herbaceous plants Paul J. Kuhn and John A. Hargreaves 10. Antimicrobial defences in secondary tissues of woody plants R. B. Pearce
This 1987 book examines infection as a phenomenon common to pathogenic and mycorrhizal fungi alike. It deals with the establishment, progress and outcome of infection and covers such important fundamental aspects as recognition and resistance and seeks to explain why some infections lead to disease while others remain symptomless and beneficial.
9780521106283
632.4 / PEG
Fungal infection of plants : symposium of the British Mycological Society / Edited by G.F. Pegg & Peter G. Ayres - Cambridge, New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011. - xiii, 428 p.: ill.; 23 cm
1. Specificity of active resistance mechanisms in plant-fungus interactions J. J. G. M. De Wit 2. Specificity and recognition in ectomycorrhizal associations J. A. Duddridge 3. Spores on leaves: endogenous and exogenous control of development John Lucas and Ian Knights 4. Pathways for the exchange of materials in mycoparasitic and plant-fungal interactions Peter Jeffries 5. Induced modifications in the plasma membranes of infected cells J. L. Gay and A. M. Woods; 6. Nutrient relations in biotrophic infections J. F. Farrar and D. H. Lewis 7. Some aspects of fungal enzymes that degrade cell walls J. P. R. Keon , R. J. W. Bryde and R. M. Cooper 8. The role of fungal toxins in plant disease Herman W. Knoche and Jonathan P. Duvick 9. Antifungal substances from herbaceous plants Paul J. Kuhn and John A. Hargreaves 10. Antimicrobial defences in secondary tissues of woody plants R. B. Pearce
This 1987 book examines infection as a phenomenon common to pathogenic and mycorrhizal fungi alike. It deals with the establishment, progress and outcome of infection and covers such important fundamental aspects as recognition and resistance and seeks to explain why some infections lead to disease while others remain symptomless and beneficial.
9780521106283
632.4 / PEG
