Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi

In view of the objects set forth in this thesis, and with analysis of the data obtained, a few points in conclusion may be taken as being reasonably true and evident. On the basis of consistently different and respectively characteristic physiologic traits it appears that Beauveria B is distinct fr...

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Main Author: Showalter, Joseph William
Other Authors: Biology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53282
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-532822020-12-18T05:38:22Z Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi Showalter, Joseph William Biology LD5655.V855 1941.S568 Fungi imperfecti -- Physiological aspects In view of the objects set forth in this thesis, and with analysis of the data obtained, a few points in conclusion may be taken as being reasonably true and evident. On the basis of consistently different and respectively characteristic physiologic traits it appears that Beauveria B is distinct from Beauveria A, even though they are essentially similar in morphology and pathogenicity. Whether they are distinct species, or are strains of the same species is unsettled. Physiologic characteristics popular to different species of closely related fungi may be used to supplement morphology and pathogenicity as criteria of classification and reidentification. In the limited host range studies, the Beauveria species were most cosmopolitan in parasitism. The Entomophthora species were largely uninfective for the insects used and under the conditions obtained, possibly having been in culture so long as to loose virulence. Endosclerotium was highly specific for a single host, the mealy bug. In this study of entomogenous fungi, embracing membrane of several representative groups, it does not appear that they can be characterized as a group apart from other fungi on the basis of physiology. They grow saphrophytically on a wide range of some 50 different proteins, sugars, nutrient solid media, and organic acids. In contrasting the physiological characteristics of the slow growing E. saphaerosperma with the other two species of Entomophthora, it can be stated that consistently different physiologic results were correlated with the distinctly different morphology. Further, the near identical physiological behavior by E. apiculata and E. saphaerosperma, paralleled with essentially similar morphology, may prove that these two are one and the same species. In the case of Endosclerotium, it may be observed that slow growth and cultural inflexibility seem to be correlated with extreme host specificity. The liquefaction of gelatin and the peptinization of proteins indicate that the Entomophthora species produce proteinase enzymes in abundance. Master of Science 2015-06-23T19:10:18Z 2015-06-23T19:10:18Z 1941 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53282 en_US OCLC# 29263343 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ [3], 53 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1941.S568
Fungi imperfecti -- Physiological aspects
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1941.S568
Fungi imperfecti -- Physiological aspects
Showalter, Joseph William
Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
description In view of the objects set forth in this thesis, and with analysis of the data obtained, a few points in conclusion may be taken as being reasonably true and evident. On the basis of consistently different and respectively characteristic physiologic traits it appears that Beauveria B is distinct from Beauveria A, even though they are essentially similar in morphology and pathogenicity. Whether they are distinct species, or are strains of the same species is unsettled. Physiologic characteristics popular to different species of closely related fungi may be used to supplement morphology and pathogenicity as criteria of classification and reidentification. In the limited host range studies, the Beauveria species were most cosmopolitan in parasitism. The Entomophthora species were largely uninfective for the insects used and under the conditions obtained, possibly having been in culture so long as to loose virulence. Endosclerotium was highly specific for a single host, the mealy bug. In this study of entomogenous fungi, embracing membrane of several representative groups, it does not appear that they can be characterized as a group apart from other fungi on the basis of physiology. They grow saphrophytically on a wide range of some 50 different proteins, sugars, nutrient solid media, and organic acids. In contrasting the physiological characteristics of the slow growing E. saphaerosperma with the other two species of Entomophthora, it can be stated that consistently different physiologic results were correlated with the distinctly different morphology. Further, the near identical physiological behavior by E. apiculata and E. saphaerosperma, paralleled with essentially similar morphology, may prove that these two are one and the same species. In the case of Endosclerotium, it may be observed that slow growth and cultural inflexibility seem to be correlated with extreme host specificity. The liquefaction of gelatin and the peptinization of proteins indicate that the Entomophthora species produce proteinase enzymes in abundance. === Master of Science
author2 Biology
author_facet Biology
Showalter, Joseph William
author Showalter, Joseph William
author_sort Showalter, Joseph William
title Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
title_short Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
title_full Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
title_fullStr Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
title_full_unstemmed Physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
title_sort physiologic studies on some entomogenous fungi
publisher Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53282
work_keys_str_mv AT showalterjosephwilliam physiologicstudiesonsomeentomogenousfungi
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