HOST SPECIFICITY IN THE RED ALGAL PARASITES BOSTRYCHIOCOLAX AUSTRALIS AND DAWSONIOCOLAX BOSTRYCHIAE (CHOREOCOLACACEAE, RHODOPHYTA)
The determinants of host specificity, which are poorly understood in red algal parasites, were studied in the red algal parasites Bostrychiocolax australis Zuccarello et West and Dawsoniocolax bostrychiae (Joly et Yamaguishi-Tomita) Joly et Yamaguishi-Tomita. Culture studies were performed to determ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of phycology 1994-06, Vol.30 (3), p.462-473 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The determinants of host specificity, which are poorly understood in red algal parasites, were studied in the red algal parasites Bostrychiocolax australis Zuccarello et West and Dawsoniocolax bostrychiae (Joly et Yamaguishi-Tomita) Joly et Yamaguishi-Tomita. Culture studies were performed to determine host range, sites of host resistance, and genetics of transmission of resistance. Both species parasitize Bostrychia radicans (Montagne) Montagne, whereas Bostrychiocolax australis also parasitizes Bostrychia moritziana (Sonder ex Kuetzing) J. Agardh and Stictosiphonia kelanensis (Grunow ex Post) R. J. King et Puttock. Isolates of B. radicans resistant to both parasites were found worldwide, often within the same population as susceptible isolates. On resistant Bostrychia species and isolates, specificity was manifested at three stages: 1) host penetration, in which the spore germ peg failed to penetrate the host cuticle/wall; 2) parasite-host cell fusion, in which the fusion cell died and the parasite died; and 3) growth, in which parasites grew but soon died; parasites rarely reproduced and infections did not continue in culture. Resistance to parasite infection was usually transmitted as a dominant trait and did not segregate as a single locus during meiosis. In certain crosses, transmission of resistance was non-mendelian. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3646 1529-8817 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.0022-3646.1994.00462.x |