Research Topics
| Johanna M SteyaertSummaryAffiliation: Lincoln University Country: New Zealand Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
Reproduction without sex: conidiation in the filamentous fungus TrichodermaJohanna M Steyaert
Bio Protection Research Centre, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand
Microbiology 156:2887-900. 2010..Also implicated in the molecular regulation are the PacC pathways and the conidial regulator VELVET. Signal transduction cascades which link environmental signals to physiological outputs have also been revealed...
Isolate-specific conidiation in Trichoderma in response to different nitrogen sourcesJohanna M Steyaert
Bio Protection Research Centre, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand
Fungal Biol 114:179-88. 2010..For the first time, we report that conidiation in response to injury is differentially regulated in different isolates/species of Trichoderma...
Ambient pH intrinsically influences Trichoderma conidiation and colony morphologyJohanna M Steyaert
Bio Protection Research Centre, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand
Fungal Biol 114:198-208. 2010..These studies highlight the complexity of ambient pH effects on Trichoderma spp. and demonstrate a need to widen the scope of research to multiple species...
Rhythmic conidiation in the blue-light fungus Trichoderma pleuroticolaJohanna M Steyaert
Bio Protection Research Centre, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand
Fungal Biol 114:219-23. 2010..has been considered to be non-circadian. In this study we uncovered evidence for circadian conidiation in Trichoderma pleuroticola and identified orthologues of the key N. crassa clock components, wc-1 (blr-1) and frq...
Development of an isolate-specific marker for tracking Phaeomoniella chlamydospora infection in grapevinesHayley J Ridgway
National Centre for Advanced Bio Protection Technologies, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand
Mycologia 97:1093-101. 2005..When the nested PCR/RFLP procedure was used to determine the persistence of viable and nonviable spores in soil, the results showed that nonviable spores were undetected after 8 wk whereas viable spores still could be detected at 17 wk...
