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Mycoparasitism by Pythium oligandrum and P. acanthicum
Authors:JW Deacon  Christine M Henry
Institution:Department of Microbiology, University of Edinburgh, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JG, Scotland
Abstract:Isolates of the reported mycoparasites Pythium oligandrum, P. acanthicum and P. periplocum markedly reduced growth and cellulolysis by Botryotrichum piluliferum, grew rapidly across agar plates precolonized by Phialophora radicicola var radicicola (sensu Deacon) and, where tested (not P. periplocum), were non-pathogenic towards higher plants. Isolates of P. echinulatum, P. mamillatum. P. megalacanthum, P. spinosum, P. ultimum and one isolate of P. acanthicum behaved differently from the mycoparasites and could, themselves, be placed in two groupings in these tests. It is suggested that the ability or otherwise to grow on Phialophora-precolonized agar plates may help to distinguish broad biological groupings within the genus Pythium, but these groupings may cut across conventional taxonomic ones.One isolate of P. acanthicum was tested for its effects on a range of cellulolytic fungi: it reduced their growth to different extents, as did P. oligandrum.Plates of potato-dextrose agar precolonized by Phialophora radicicola were used to isolate selectively P. oligandrum and similar fungi from soils, but the use of hemp seed baits in conjunction with precolonized plates was less selective for these fungi.Straw pieces precolonized by P. oligandrum and buried in soil decomposed at the same rate as virgin straws or those precolonized by P. ultimum or Mucor hiemalis. Subsequently, Stachyholrys atra appeared to colonize straws more frequently from soil, and Fusarium spp. less so, in the presence of P. oligandrum than in its absence. In the laboratory, P. oligandrum was antagonized by Slachyholrys, whereas Fusarium spp. were frequently overgrown by the Pythium.
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