Publications by authors named "Emil Rekanovic"

Article Synopsis
  • - Botryosphaeria dothidea is mainly known for causing diseases in woody plants, like stem canker and dieback, but has also been linked to damaging field crops such as soybeans, tobacco, and sugar beets.
  • - In a survey conducted in Serbia in September 2023, 3% of sugar beet samples showed severe root rot symptoms, with dark brown lesions and completely rotted roots indicating possible infection by B. dothidea.
  • - Two fungal isolates were obtained and identified through their growth characteristics and DNA analysis, confirming their identity as B. dothidea, consistent with previously documented descriptions of the pathogen.
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In Europe, two fastidious phloem-limited pathogens, 'Candidatus Phytoplasma solani' (16SrXII-A) and 'Candidatus Arsenophonus phytopathogenicus', are associated with rubbery taproot disease (RTD) and syndrome basses richesses (SBR) of sugar beet, respectively. Both diseases can significantly reduce yield, especially when accompanied by root rot fungi. This study investigates the presence, geographic distribution and genetic traits of fastidious pathogens and the accompanying fungus, Macrophomina phaseolina, found on sugar beet across four geographically separated plains spanning seven countries in Central Europe.

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Crop losses caused by the plant pathogenic bacterium ' Phytoplasma solani' (CaPsol) underscore the need to better understand its perplexing epidemiological pathways. (Hemiptera, Cixiidae) is a prominent CaPsol vector with three plant associations in Serbia (/HobsUd; /HobsCa; /HobsCf). Another cixiid planthopper, (Dufour), has been recently confirmed as a noteworthy CaPsol vector.

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Article Synopsis
  • Two pathogens, 'Arsenophonus phytopathogenicus' and 'Phytoplasma solani', pose a significant threat to sugar beet crops in France, Switzerland, and Germany, with a particular research focus on eastern Germany's Saxony-Anhalt being lacking.
  • This study is the first to identify a predominance of a new subgroup of 'P. solani' strain, 16SrXII-P, in Saxony-Anhalt, which differs significantly from strains found in other parts of Germany and France.
  • Historical analyses reveal that this strain has been present in sugar beets since 2020, indicating a need for further investigation into phytoplasma infections and their impact on sugar beet agriculture in Germany.
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' Phytoplasma solani' (stolbur phytoplasma) is associated with rubbery taproot disease (RTD) of sugar beet ( L.), while is considered the most important root rot pathogen of this plant in Serbia. The high prevalence of .

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Rubbery taproot disease (RTD) of sugar beet was recently associated with the plant pathogenic bacterium 'Candidatus Phytoplasma solani' (CaPsol) and reported throughout the Pannonian Plain with variations in severity. Tracing CaPsol epidemiological pathways was performed in the experimental sugar beet field in Rimski Šančevi (Serbia) in 2020-2021, where an RTD outbreak was recently recorded. A molecular epidemiology approach was applied to the study of three RTD occurrence scenarios: epidemic, non-epidemic and 'absence of RTD'.

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Rubbery taproot disease of sugar beet (RTD), associated with ' Phytoplasma solani', appeared in 2020 on an epidemic scale in northern Serbia and southern Slovakia, situated at opposite edges of the Pannonian Plain. In the affected locations where the disease was assessed, symptomatic sugar beets were analysed for phytoplasma infection. Additionally, multilocus sequence analyses of '.

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Rubbery taproot disease (RTD) of sugar beet was observed in Serbia for the first time in the 1960s. The disease was already described in neighboring Bulgaria and Romania at the time but it was associated with abiotic factors. In this study on RTD of sugar beet in its main growing area of Serbia, we provide evidence of the association between ' Phytoplasma solani' (stolbur phytoplasma) infection and the occurrence of typical RTD symptomatology.

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Floricolous downy mildews (, oomycetes) are a small, monophyletic group of mostly inconspicuous plant pathogens that induce symptoms exclusively on flowers. Characterization of this group of pathogens, and information about their biology, is particularly sparse. The recurrent presence of a disease causing flower malformation which, in turn, leads to high production losses of the medicinal herb in Serbia has enabled continuous experiments focusing on the pathogen and its biology.

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Thirty-five actinobacterial isolates, obtained from button mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) substrates (i.e., compost in different phases of composting, black peat or casing layer) in Serbia in 2014-2016 were tested in vitro against the causal agents of green mold in cultivated mushroom.

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ASBTRACT Toxicity of twenty-two essential oils to three bacterial pathogens in different horticultural systems: Xanthomonas campestris pv. phaseoli (causing blight of bean), Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. michiganensis (bacterial wilt and canker of tomato), and Pseudomonas tolaasii (causal agent of bacterial brown blotch on cultivated mushrooms) was tested.

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Trichoderma species, the causal agents of green mould disease, induce great losses in Agaricus bisporus farms. Fungicides are widely used to control mushroom diseases although green mould control is encumbered with difficulties. The aims of this study were, therefore, to research in vitro toxicity of several commercial fungicides to Trichoderma isolates originating from Serbian and Bosnia-Herzegovina farms, and to evaluate the effects of pH and light on their growth.

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A study of the in vitro sensitivity of 12 isolates of Phytophthora infestans to metalaxyl, azoxystrobin, dimethomorph, cymoxanil, zoxamide and mancozeb, was conducted. The isolates derived from infected potato leaves collected at eight different localities in Serbia during 2005-2007. The widest range of EC(50) values for mycelial growth of the isolates was recorded for metalaxyl.

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In vitro antibacterial activity tests of seven biofungicides (Ekstrasol, Bisolbisan, Bisolbifit, Serenade, Sonata, Timorex, F-Stop) and two disinfectants (colloidal silver alone and in combination with hydrogen peroxide) against the Pseudomonas tolaasii strain (NS3B6) were carried out by the disc-diffusion, broth microdilution and broth macrodilution method. Biofungicides tested in this study did not exhibit any antimicrobial activity in neither one of the methods used. Disc diffusion method revealed high sensitivity of the tested P.

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Isolates of Cladobotryum dendroides from Serbian mushroom farms and Agaricus bisporus F56 were tested for sensitivity to selected fungicides in vitro. Chlorothalonil was the most toxic fungicide to C. dendroides isolates (EC(50) values were below 1.

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Twenty microfungal isolates were collected from diseased fruiting bodies of Agaricus bisporus sampled from Serbian mushroom farms during 2003-2007. Based on morphological characteristics and pathogenicity tests, the isolates were identified as Cladobotryum dendroides. The isolates of C.

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