18 results on '"Solheim, H."'
Search Results
2. Sporendocladia bactrospora associated with wounds on native broadleaved trees in Norway and Sweden.
- Author
-
Roux, J., Solheim, H., Kamgan Nkuekam, G., Wingfield, M. J., and Sturrock, R.
- Subjects
- *
ASCOMYCETES , *TREE injuries , *OPHIOSTOMATACEAE , *WOUND infections , *CAMBIUM , *FUNGAL morphology - Abstract
A survey to identify ophiostomatoid fungi that infect wounds on native Norwegian and Swedish broadleaved trees was undertaken during summer 2004. A fungus resembling a species of Sporendocladia was commonly isolated from the exposed cambium and inner bark of wounds. Morphological examination and comparisons of DNA sequence data for the ITS and 5.8 S regions of the rRNA gene region led to its identification as Sporendocladia bactrospora. Pathogenicity trials on young Populus tremula and Betula pubescens trees showed that S. bactrospora is capable of causing lesions on these trees. There have been few previous reports of S. bactrospora, and in most cases, these have been as saprophytes on wood. In contrast, results of this study show that it is a common inhabitant of freshly made wounds on native broadleaved trees in Scandinavia, and it appears to contribute to staining of wood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Population structure of Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus and its genetic relationship to Hymenoscyphus albidus.
- Author
-
Bengtsson, S.B.K., Vasaitis, R., Kirisits, T., Solheim, H., and Stenlid, J.
- Subjects
ASCOMYCETES ,FUNGAL populations ,FUNGAL genetics ,DIEBACK ,APOTHECIUM - Abstract
Abstract: The ascomycete fungus Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus (anamorph Chalara fraxinea) is responsible for ash dieback currently expanding over large parts of Europe. Our objective was to investigate the genetic structure of H. pseudoalbidus and to examine its relationship to the species H. albidus, known as a saprotroph. The study comprised 181 isolates of H. pseudoalbidus collected within the diseased area, 17 H. albidus isolates from six apothecia, collected outside the diseased area in Norway, and nine apothecia of H. pseudoalbidus collected in Sweden. By analysis of microsatellite markers developed for this study, combined with AP-PCR using the M13 primer, we demonstrated sexual heterothally in H. pseudoalbidus, detected high gene flow and low geographic structure of the H. pseudoalbidus population and found indications of a founder effect. Also, substantial genetic differences were detected between the two species of fungi; only four of seven microsatellite markers developed for H. pseudoalbidus were amplified for H. albidus, and no alleles were shared among the species. Furthermore, AP-PCR banding patterns were distinctly different for the two species. We conclude that even though the two fungi have a similar habitat and are morphologically virtually identical, they do not share a recent common ancestor. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Dutch elm disease has currently a low incidence on wych elm in Norway.
- Author
-
Solheim, H., Eriksen, R., and Hietala, A. M.
- Subjects
- *
DUTCH elm disease , *DISEASE incidence , *WYCH elm , *BARK beetles , *BIOACCUMULATION - Abstract
A rapid increase in the frequency of Dutch elm disease (DED), a wilting disease of elm trees caused by bark-beetle vectored fungi, was observed in the early 1990s on several wych elm stands around Oslofjord, southern Norway. To examine the current status of the disease and its impacts on elm population, disease frequency and size distribution of elms were recorded at four locations. Northern parts of Lier, a municipality most affected by DED in Norway 15 years ago, showed in the survey season 4% disease frequency, whereas 13.8% of trees were dead, the dead trees having accumulated over several years in the unmanaged stands. In southern parts of the municipality the mean disease and death percentages were 1.9 and 2.4%. Compatible with their low disease incidence in early 1990s, the other two areas now examined, municipality of Larvik and district of Grenland, showed comparably low frequency of DED. Northern part of Lier showed significantly higher overall density of elm trees per hectare than the other examined areas, and also the small elms below 5 cm in d.b.h. were most frequent in this region. In contrast, the density of large trees was lower in northern Lier than in the other examined areas. These data suggest that regeneration of the tree is not prohibited owing to the disease but that the large trees have been locally reduced in frequency as a result of DED. The superior general density of elm trees in northern Lier, owing to the exceptionally rich soil in the warm southern slopes of the region,> may have contributed to the rapid increase of DED in the area 15 years ago and to the subsequent settlement of the disease outbreak as a chronic stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ash dieback: pathogen spread and diurnal patterns of ascospore dispersal, with special emphasis on Norway.
- Author
-
Timmermann, V., Børja, I., Hietala, A. M., Kirisits, T., and Solheim, H.
- Subjects
EUROPEAN ash ,ASCOMYCETES ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms - Abstract
Dieback of European ash ( Fraxinus excelsior), caused by the ascomycete Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus (anamorph Chalara fraxinea), started around 1992 in Poland and has since then spread over large geographical areas. By November 2010, the disease had been recorded in 22 European countries. The gradual expansion and high intensity of the ash dieback epidemic in Europe may suggest that H. pseudoalbidus is an invasive alien organism. In Norway, ash dieback was first reported in spring 2008, and a survey in early summer of the same year revealed that the disease had spread over large parts of the southern and eastern regions of the country. The distance from the southernmost to the northernmost infected stands was, at that time, about 400 km. Some old necrotic lesions were also observed, indicating that the ash dieback pathogen is likely to have been present in Norway since at least 2006. In 2009, a spore sampler was installed in a diseased ash stand at Ås, South-Eastern Norway. Sampling started in late July and continued until late September. Large numbers of ascospores resembling those of H. pseudoalbidus were observed, with the maximum number of spores occurring from the end of July to mid-August. The deposition of ascospores occurred mainly between 6 and 8 a.m. Ascospores are most likely to be the primary source initiating host infections and responsible for the rapid recent spread of H. pseudoalbidus in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Losses caused by the needle blight fungus Delphinella abietis in a greenery trial of Nobel fir in western Norway.
- Author
-
Solheim, H. and Skage, J.-O.
- Subjects
- *
NOBLE fir ,FIR diseases & pests - Abstract
Summary In a greenery trial of Nobel fir (Abies procera ) in western Norway, most branches had good quality until 1994 when 31% of the branches were discarded. Since then a high level of losses has been noted and 87% were discarded in 2000. A survey in 1998 revealed that the needle blight fungus Delphinella abietis was the main cause. It seems that frost did not initiate or maintain the disease in the stand, but generally low temperatures may have been important. Discarded branches with the fungus have been left on the ground and have probably been important in maintaining a high level of attack. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Fungal succession in sapwood of Norway spruce infested by the bark beetle Pis typographus
- Author
-
Solheim, H.
- Subjects
- *
PLANT-pathogen relationships , *SCRUB pine , *SPRUCE bark beetles , *MYCOSES , *TRICHODERMA - Abstract
Healthy Norway spruce trees were investigated over 130 weeks following successful attack by the bark beetle Ips typographus in a study of fungal invasion. The study was undertaken in southeastern Norway during an epidemic period. Sapwood moisture was measured and the tree reaction and beetle activity were noted, fungal invasion was examined in disc samples taken 1, 5, 10 and 15 m above stump height. The fungal penetration in the sapwood started very slowly, but accelerated during the fourth week after attack. The leading edge of fungal penetration was a few millimeters in advance of the visible blue-stain until the heartwood was reached. The development of blue-stain was similar in Lardal, 1979, and at Ås, 1980, but with some differences related to the air temperature. Fungi were found to invade the sapwood successively. The pathogenic species, Ophiostoma polonicum, was the primary invader occurring during the first week, followed by other beetletransmitted species. The secondary invaders, O. bicolor, Graphium sp. 1, O. penicillatum and O. ainoae, entered the sapwood during the first three weeks after attack and reached a peak within ten weeks. The tertiary invaders, probably also beetle transmitted, were not as common as the secondary colonizers. The first Hymenomycetes, rather weak white-rotters, appeared among the tertiary invaders. Later succession was dependent on the moisture content of sapwood. Strong decaying whiterotters entered the sapwood near the base where the moisture content remained favourable, while cf. Trichoderma viride dominated in the drier parts of the trees, where the sapwood moisture declined to fibre saturation point 75 weeks after attack. The heavy beetle attack, averaged 3.7 entrance holes per dm² over more than ten meters of the stem, overwhelmed the trees rapidly and no secondary resinosis occurred. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Ecology and distribution of Armillaria species in Norway.
- Author
-
Keča, N. and Solheim, H.
- Subjects
- *
ARMILLARIA , *SPECIES distribution , *PLANT ecology , *PERMAFROST , *CLADISTIC analysis , *DEAD trees - Abstract
The occurence of Armillaria species was assessed in Norway, enabling the northern-most distribution of this genus to be determined in Europe. Four Armillaria species were found in Norway. Armillaria borealis was the most common species occurring on woody vegetation to the permafrost zone (ca. 69°N). Armillaria cepistipes was present in southern and central Norway, but was not found further than 66°N. Armillaria solidipes and Armillaria gallica were rare, found at only one locality each; 59°40′ and 59°32′, respectively. Armillaria species were found on 14 hosts, but there was no significant difference between occurrence of A. borealis and A. cepistipes on declining and dead trees. Phylogenetic analyses separated each species into separate clades. All isolates of A. borealis, except one, and most isolates of A. solidipes were in separate clades. However, a subclade within the A. borealis clade was formed of two A. ostoyae and one A. borealis isolates. Two small A. cepistipes genets were found in a declining oak stand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. First record of Melampsoridium hiratsukanum on alder in Norway.
- Author
-
Gjæum, H. B., Lye, K. A., and Solheim, H.
- Subjects
ALDER ,RUST fungi ,MELAMPSORACEAE ,PLANT spores ,PLANT diseases - Abstract
In September 2001, the uredinia sori of rust were found on alder trees in As parish, Akershus, in south-eastern Norway. Further examination of these sori, which always occurred on the lower side of the infected leaves, revealed urediniospores, which were uniformly echinulate and which had apical spines. From this morphology, Melampsoridium hiratsukanum was identified. Melampsoridium betulinum is also known to occur on A. glutinosa in As. A germination test with fresh urediniospores of M. hiratsukanum revealed four to six bizonate pores, similar to those reported for M. betulinum. However, this rust lacks spines in the apical region of its urediniospores and it is the presence of spines in the apical region that distinguishes these rust species.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Seven new species of Graphilbum from conifers in Norway, Poland, and Russia.
- Author
-
Jankowiak R, Solheim H, Bilański P, Marincowitz S, and Wingfield MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA, Fungal genetics, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer genetics, Norway, Ophiostomatales isolation & purification, Poland, RNA, Ribosomal genetics, Russia, Spores, Fungal, Weevils microbiology, Coleoptera microbiology, Ophiostomatales classification, Ophiostomatales genetics, Phylogeny, Tracheophyta microbiology
- Abstract
During surveys of insect-associated mycobiomes in Norway, Poland, and Russia, isolates with affinity to Graphilbum (Ophiostomatales, Ascomycota) were recovered. In this study, eight known Graphilbum species as well as the newly collected isolates were compared based on morphology and DNA sequence data for four gene regions. The results revealed seven new species, described here as G. acuminatum, G. carpaticum, G. curvidentis, G. furuicola, G. gorcense, G. interstitiale , and G. sexdentatum . In addition to these species, G. crescericum and G. sparsum were commonly found in Norway. All new species were recovered from conifers in association with bark beetles, cerambycid beetles, and weevils and were morphologically similar, predominantly with pesotum-like asexual morphs. Where sexual morphs were present, these were small ascomata with short necks and rod-shaped ascospores having hyaline sheaths. The results suggest that Graphilbum species are common members of the Ophiostomatales in conifer ecosystems.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Priming of inducible defenses protects Norway spruce against tree-killing bark beetles.
- Author
-
Mageroy MH, Christiansen E, Långström B, Borg-Karlson AK, Solheim H, Björklund N, Zhao T, Schmidt A, Fossdal CG, and Krokene P
- Subjects
- Acetates pharmacology, Animals, Cyclopentanes pharmacology, Fungi physiology, Norway, Oxylipins pharmacology, Plant Growth Regulators, Terpenes, Trees, Coleoptera, Picea immunology, Plant Bark chemistry, Plant Diseases immunology
- Abstract
Plants can form an immunological memory known as defense priming, whereby exposure to a priming stimulus enables quicker or stronger response to subsequent attack by pests and pathogens. Such priming of inducible defenses provides increased protection and reduces allocation costs of defense. Defense priming has been widely studied for short-lived model plants such as Arabidopsis, but little is known about this phenomenon in long-lived plants like spruce. We compared the effects of pretreatment with sublethal fungal inoculations or application of the phytohormone methyl jasmonate (MeJA) on the resistance of 48-year-old Norway spruce (Picea abies) trees to mass attack by a tree-killing bark beetle beginning 35 days later. Bark beetles heavily infested and killed untreated trees but largely avoided fungus-inoculated trees and MeJA-treated trees. Quantification of defensive terpenes at the time of bark beetle attack showed fungal inoculation induced 91-fold higher terpene concentrations compared with untreated trees, whereas application of MeJA did not significantly increase terpenes. These results indicate that resistance in fungus-inoculated trees is a result of direct induction of defenses, whereas resistance in MeJA-treated trees is due to defense priming. This work extends our knowledge of defense priming from model plants to an ecologically important tree species., (© 2019 The Authors. Plant, Cell & Environment published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Four new Ophiostoma species associated with hardwood-infesting bark beetles in Norway and Poland.
- Author
-
Aas T, Solheim H, Jankowiak R, Bilański P, and Hausner G
- Subjects
- Animals, Calmodulin genetics, Cluster Analysis, DNA, Fungal chemistry, DNA, Fungal genetics, DNA, Ribosomal chemistry, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer chemistry, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer genetics, Norway, Ophiostomatales genetics, Peptide Elongation Factor 1 genetics, Poland, RNA, Ribosomal genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Tubulin genetics, Ophiostomatales classification, Ophiostomatales isolation & purification, Phylogeny, Weevils microbiology, Wood parasitology
- Abstract
Ophiostoma spp. (Ophiostomatales, Ascomycota) are well-known fungi associated with bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae, Platypodinae). Fungi in the Ophiostomatales include serious tree pathogens as well as agents of timber blue-stain. Although these fungi have been extensively studied in the northern hemisphere, very little is known regarding their occurrence on hardwoods in Europe. The aims of the present study were to identify and characterize new Ophiostoma spp. associated with bark and ambrosia beetles infesting hardwoods in Norway and Poland, and to resolve phylogenetic relationships of Ophiostoma spp. related to the Norwegian and Polish isolates, using multigene phylogenetic analyses. Results obtained from five gene regions (ITS, LSU, β-tubulin, calmodulin, translation elongation factor 1-α) revealed four new Ophiostoma spp. These include Ophiostoma hylesinum sp. nov., O. signatum sp. nov., and O. villosum sp. nov. that phylogenetically are positioned within the Ophiostoma ulmi complex. The other new species, Ophiostoma pseudokarelicum sp. nov. reside along with Ophiostoma karelicum in a discrete, well-supported phylogenetic group in Ophiostoma s. stricto. The results of this study clearly show that the diversity and ecology of Ophiostoma spp. on hardwoods in Europe is poorly understood and that further studies are required to enrich our knowledge about these fungi., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Three new Leptographium spp. (Ophiostomatales) infecting hardwood trees in Norway and Poland.
- Author
-
Jankowiak R, Ostafińska A, Aas T, Solheim H, Bilański P, Linnakoski R, and Hausner G
- Subjects
- Alnus parasitology, Animals, Coleoptera microbiology, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Fagus parasitology, Hyphae classification, Hyphae genetics, Hyphae ultrastructure, Norway, Ophiostomatales genetics, Ophiostomatales isolation & purification, Phylogeography, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Diseases parasitology, Poland, Quercus parasitology, Spores, Fungal classification, Spores, Fungal genetics, Spores, Fungal ultrastructure, Alnus microbiology, DNA, Fungal genetics, Fagus microbiology, Ophiostomatales classification, Phylogeny, Quercus microbiology
- Abstract
Species of Leptographium are characterized by mononematous or synnematous conidiophores and are commonly associated with different arthropods. Some of them also produce a sexual state characterised by globose ascomata with elongated necks. Compared to investigations on coniferous trees, the occurrence of Leptographium species on hardwood trees has been poorly studied in Europe. During a survey of ophiostomatoid fungi on various hardwood tree species in Norway and Poland, three unusual species, which fit in the broader morphological description of Leptographium spp., were found in association with Trypodendron domesticum, Trypodendron signatum and Dryocoetes alni, and from wounds on a variety of hardwoods. Phylogenetic analyses of sequence data for six different loci (ITS1-5.8 S-ITS2, ITS2-LSU, ACT, β-tubulin, CAL, and TEF-1α) showed that these Leptographium species are phylogenetically closely related to the species of the Grosmannia olivacea complex. The first species forms a well-supported lineage that includes Ophiostoma brevicolle, while the two other new taxa resided in a separate lineage; possibly affiliated with Grosmannia francke-grosmanniae. All the new species produce perithecia with necks terminating in ostiolar hyphae and orange-section shaped ascospores with cucullate, gelatinous sheaths. These species also produce dark olivaceous mononematous asexual states in culture. In addition, two of the newly described species have a second type of conidiophore with a short and non-pigmented stipe. The new Leptographium species can be easily distinguished from each other by their appearance and growth in culture. Based on novel morphological characters and distinct DNA sequences, these fungi were recognised as new taxa for which the names Leptographium tardum sp. nov., Leptographium vulnerum sp. nov., and Leptographium flavum sp. nov. are provided.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Indications of heightened constitutive or primed host response affecting the lignin pathway transcripts and phenolics in mature Norway spruce clones.
- Author
-
Fossdal CG, Nagy NE, Hietala AM, Kvaalen H, Slimestad R, Woodward S, and Solheim H
- Subjects
- Cell Wall chemistry, Cell Wall microbiology, DNA Primers genetics, Lignin analysis, Lignin genetics, Norway, Phenols analysis, Phenols metabolism, Picea chemistry, Picea immunology, Picea microbiology, Plant Bark chemistry, Plant Bark genetics, Plant Bark immunology, Plant Bark microbiology, Plant Diseases microbiology, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Plant genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Species Specificity, Basidiomycota physiology, Disease Resistance genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant genetics, Lignin metabolism, Picea genetics, Plant Diseases immunology
- Abstract
Two mature clones of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) that have previously been shown to have differential degrees of resistance towards the necrotrophic pathogen Heterobasidion parviporum (Niemelä & Korhonen) were compared with respect to the primed defense expression of transcripts related to biosynthesis of lignin, stilbenes and other phenolic compounds from one year to the next. The host's response to physical wounding and pathogen inoculation was examined in the initial year, whereas indications of heightened basal defense level or primed response, and responses to re-wounding, were examined the following year. The responses of the two clones to wounding and pathogen inoculation, examined in the initial year, differed; the increases in lignin and phenolics were more distinct in response to the pathogen than to wounding alone. The more resistant clone 589 had higher initial lignin concentrations in the cell walls when compared with clone 409, and these remained higher in clone 589 over both years and increased after the treatments. Both clones responded at the transcriptional and chemical levels to wounding; changes were evident both in the initial wounds and when re-wounded the following year. There were distinct differences in the basal transcript levels of the lignin pathway-related genes, phenolics and total lignin levels in healthy tissue from the initial year to the following year indicative of a primed host response or at least altered constitutive level of defense expression.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Local and systemic changes in expression of resistance genes, NB-LRR genes and their putative microRNAs in Norway spruce after wounding and inoculation with the pathogen Ceratocystis polonica.
- Author
-
Fossdal CG, Yaqoob N, Krokene P, Kvaalen H, Solheim H, and Yakovlev IA
- Subjects
- Down-Regulation genetics, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Mycelium, Norway, Picea immunology, Picea microbiology, Plant Bark genetics, Plant Bark immunology, Plant Bark microbiology, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Stems genetics, Plant Stems immunology, Plant Stems microbiology, RNA, Plant genetics, Seedlings genetics, Seedlings immunology, Seedlings microbiology, Up-Regulation genetics, Wounds and Injuries, Ascomycota pathogenicity, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant genetics, Genes, Plant genetics, MicroRNAs genetics, Picea genetics, Plant Diseases immunology
- Abstract
Background: NB-LRR resistance proteins are involved in recognizing pathogens and other exogenous stressors in plants. Resistance proteins are the first step in induced defence responses and a better understanding of their regulation is important to understand the mechanisms of plant defence. Much of the post-transcriptional regulation in plants is controlled by microRNAs (miRNA). We examined the expression of five Norway spruce miRNA that may regulate NB-LRR related transcripts in secondary phloem (bark) of resistant Norway spruce after wounding and inoculation with the necrotrophic blue stain fungus Ceratocystis polonica., Results: The plants of this clone recovered from both the pathogen inoculations and wounding alone. We found local and systemic induction of the resistance marker genes PaChi4, PaPAL and PaPX3 indicative of an effective induced host defence response. There were minor local and systemic changes in the expression of five miRNAs and 21 NB-LRRs between healthy and treated plants. Only five putative NB-LRRs (PaLRR1, PaLRR3, PaLRR14, PaLRR15 and PaLRR16) showed significant increases greater than two-fold as a local response to C. polonica. Of all NB-LRRs only PaLRR3, the most highly differentially regulated NB-LRR, showed a significant increase also due to wounding. The five miRNAs showed indications of an initial local and systemic down-regulation at day 1, followed by a later increase up to and beyond the constitutive levels at day 6. However, the initial down-regulation was significant only for miR3693 and miR3705., Conclusions: Overall, local and systemic expression changes were evident only for the established resistance marker genes and PaLRR3. The minor expression changes observed both for the followed miRNAs and their predicted NB-LRR targets suggest that the expression of most NB-LRR genes are maintained close to their constitutive levels in stressed and healthy Norway spruce plants.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The influence of Ceratocystis polonica inoculation and methyl jasmonate application on terpene chemistry of Norway spruce, Picea abies.
- Author
-
Zhao T, Krokene P, Björklund N, Långström B, Solheim H, Christiansen E, and Borg-Karlson AK
- Subjects
- Animals, Bicyclic Monoterpenes, Cyclohexane Monoterpenes, Cyclohexenes analysis, Drug Resistance, Fungal, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Monoterpenes analysis, Norway, Plant Bark chemistry, Plant Stems chemistry, Stereoisomerism, Terpenes analysis, Acetates pharmacology, Ascomycota physiology, Coleoptera microbiology, Cyclopentanes pharmacology, Oxylipins pharmacology, Picea microbiology, Plant Diseases microbiology, Terpenes metabolism
- Abstract
Constitutive and inducible terpene production is involved in conifer resistance against bark beetles and their associated fungi. In this study 72 Norway spruce (Picea abies) were randomly assigned to methyl jasmonate (MJ) application, inoculation with the bluestain fungus Ceratocystis polonica, or no-treatment control. We investigated terpene levels in the stem bark of the trees before treatment, 30 days and one year after treatment using GC-MS and two-dimensional GC (2D-GC) with a chiral column, and monitored landing and attack rates of the spruce bark beetle, Ips typographus, on the trees by sticky traps and visual inspection. Thirty days after fungal inoculation the absolute amount and relative proportion of (+)-3-carene, sabinene, and terpinolene increased and (+)-alpha-pinene decreased. Spraying the stems with MJ tended to generally increase the concentration of most major terpenes with minor alteration to their relative proportions, but significant increases were only observed for (-)-beta-pinene and (-)-limonene. Fungal inoculation significantly increased the enantiomeric ratio of (-)-alpha-pinene and (-)-limonene 1 month after treatment, whereas MJ only increased that of (-)-limonene. One year after treatment, both MJ and fungal inoculation increased the concentration of most terpenes relative to undisturbed control trees, with significant changes in (-)-beta-pinene, (-)-beta-phellandrene and some other compounds. Terpene levels did not change in untreated stem sections after treatment, and chemical induction by MJ and C. polonica thus seemed to be restricted to the treated stem section. The enantiomeric ratio of (-)-alpha-pinene was significantly higher and the relative proportions of (-)-limonene were significantly lower in trees that were attractive to bark beetles compared to unattractive trees. One month after fungal inoculation, the total amount of diterpenes was significantly higher in putative resistant trees with shorter lesion lengths than in putative susceptible trees with longer lesions. Thus, terpene composition in the stem bark may be related to resistance of Norway spruce against I. typographus and C. polonica., (Copyright 2010. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Spatial patterns in hyphal growth and substrate exploitation within norway spruce stems colonized by the pathogenic white-rot fungus Heterobasidion parviporum.
- Author
-
Hietala AM, Nagy NE, Steffenrem A, Kvaalen H, Fossdal CG, and Solheim H
- Subjects
- DNA, Fungal genetics, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Norway, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Basidiomycota growth & development, Hyphae growth & development, Picea microbiology, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Stems microbiology
- Abstract
In Norway spruce, a fungistatic reaction zone with a high pH and enrichment of phenolics is formed in the sapwood facing heartwood colonized by the white-rot fungus Heterobasidion parviporum. Fungal penetration of the reaction zone eventually results in expansion of this xylem defense. To obtain information about mechanisms operating upon heartwood and reaction zone colonization by the pathogen, hyphal growth and wood degradation were investigated using real-time PCR, microscopy, and comparative wood density analysis of naturally colonized trees with extensive stem decay. The hyphae associated with delignified wood at stump level were devoid of any extracellular matrix, whereas incipient decay at the top of decay columns was characterized by a carbohydrate-rich hyphal sheath attaching hyphae to tracheid walls. The amount of pathogen DNA peaked in aniline wood, a narrow darkened tissue at the colony border apparently representing a compromised region of the reaction zone. Vigorous production of pathogen conidiophores occurred in this region. Colonization of aniline wood was characterized by hyphal growth within polyphenolic lumen deposits in tracheids and rays, and the hyphae were fully encased in a carbohydrate-rich extracellular matrix. Together, these data indicate that the interaction of the fungus with the reaction zone involves a local concentration of fungal biomass that forms an efficient translocation channel for nutrients. Finally, the enhanced production of the hyphal sheath may be instrumental in lateral expansion of the decay column beyond the reaction zone boundary.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. [The provision and development of dental health care in the county of Troms].
- Author
-
Solheim H
- Subjects
- Norway, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Dental Care organization & administration
- Published
- 1986
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.