Background: Truffles (Tuber spp.) are the most precious ectomycorrhizal edible mushrooms whose biodiversity is seriously endangered.
Objective: To develop a protocol for cryopreservation of Tuber spp. mycelia using T. borchii as a model species, verifying whether conservation in liquid nitrogen may affect viability, growth rate, hyphal morphology and infectivity.
Materials And Methods: Cryopreservation was performed using sorbitol, sucrose and DMSO as cryoprotectants. The morphological parameters analyzed were: hyphal diameter, septal distance and hyphal growth unit. Cryopreserved mycelium infectivity was assessed by inoculating Quercus robur seedlings.
Results: In T. borchii cryopreserved mycelium, the lag-phase lasted for 6-42 days but no differences in growth curve evolution, growth rate and hyphal morphology were observed except for hyphal growth unit. No differences in mycorrhizal colonization were observed between the seedlings inoculated with non-cryopreserved and cryopreserved mycelium.
Conclusion: The established protocol is suitable for long-term conservation of Tuber mycelium and opens up the possibility of creating a Tuber spp. germplasm bank to preserve truffle diversity.
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Wireworms ( spp., Coleoptera, Elateridae) are a major threat to potatoes, as are the current commercial standards for assessing potato damage. To reduce wireworm impacts on potato crops and comply with IPM legislation, we started research to assess the potential for new Italian 4x-breeding clones to reduce wireworm feeding on daughter tubers.
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January 2025
Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Seoul, 08826, Republic of Korea.
Plant root and soil-associated microbiomes are influenced by niches, including bulk and rhizosphere soil. In this work, we collected bulk and rhizosphere soil samples at four potato developmental stages (leaf growth, flowering, tuber elongation and harvest) to identify whether rhizosphere microbiota are structured in a growth stage-dependent manner. The bacterial and fungal microbiota showed significant temporal differences in the rhizosphere and bulk soil.
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September 2024
Laboratory of Experimental Neurophysiology, Department of Research and Development, Biological Faculty, Irkutsk State University, Irkutsk, Russia.
It is well known that the number of true truffles in the wild is decreasing. The aim of the study was to develop an effective, simple and affordable method of asci disruption to release black truffle spores. It was shown that the spore release can be achieved by different ways, such as mechanical or biological destruction.
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February 2025
LR21AGR03-Production and Protection for a Sustainable Horticulture (2PHD), IRESA-University of Sousse, Regional Research Centre on Horticulture and Organic Agriculture, 4042, Chott Mariem, Tunisia.
Fusarium dry rot, Pythium leak and Southern blight diseases caused by various Fusarium species, Pythium aphanidermatum, and Agroathelia rolfsii, respectively, are responsible for important losses of tuber at the post-harvest stage in Tunisia. In the present study, six Bacillus strains, isolated from wild solanaceous plants, were screened for their abilities to inhibit potato pathogens in vitro and on potato tubers. Based on the dual culture assays, the whole cell suspensions of B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
November 2024
Department of Life, Health and Environmental Sciences (MeSVA), University of L'Aquila, Via Vetoio, 67100, L'Aquila, Italy.
Tuber spp. (Ascomycota) forms hypogeous fruiting bodies (truffles) that host many microbial species as well as invertebrates which feed on them. Despite the larvae and adults of Diptera and Coleoptera are commonly found to inhabit truffles, molecular investigations assessing their occurrence are still few and the number of species is probably underestimated.
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