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Showing 3 results for Oak

Najmeh Moradi, Mehdi Sadravi,
Volume 6, Issue 2 (9-2017)
Abstract

Sadravi  M.  & Moradi N. 2017. Four important oak trees diseases in Iran. Plant Pathology Science 6(2):14-23.

Zagros Mountains in the west of Iran and some areas in the north of Iran are covered by oak trees. Four important diseases of Iranian oak trees are charcoal rot, chestnut blight, sudden death and powdery mildew. The symptoms of these diseases and the characteristics of pathogens as well as their prevalence are described in this article. Some strategies for protecting the oak trees from these diseases are also proposed here.


Samaneh Ahmadi, Fariba Ghaderi, Dariush Safaei,
Volume 9, Issue 1 (3-2020)
Abstract

Ahmadi S, Ghaderi F, Safaee D (2020) Oak charcoal rot disease in Iran. Plant Pathology Science 9(1):118-128.         DOI: 10.2982/PPS.9.1.118.

Oak charcoal rot is caused by two fungi, Biscogniauxia mediterranea and Obolarina persica. These fungi, which are opportunistic or secondary invaders and attack stressful trees, are one of the main problems of oak forests in Iran. The disease was first reported in 2011 in the northern forests on Quercus castaneifolia and Zelkova carpinifolia trees and then in the Zagros forests on Q. brantii tree. The disease has spread rapidly in the forests of the Zagros over the years. Symptoms of the disease include decay and death of trees, browning of leaves and early fall. Gum secretion on the branches and trunks of old trees and browning of wood texture and woody vessels can be seen up and down the height of the trunk. The morphological characteristics of pathogens, the spread and survival of pathogens, and disease management methods are described in this article.

Student Sarina Zaker Abbasali, Dr Navazollah Sahebani, Dr Farahnaz Jahanshahi Afshar, Dr Soheil Karimi,
Volume 13, Issue 2 (9-2024)
Abstract

The Mazandaran Province occupies more than half of the area of Hyrcanian forests in the north of Iran and has a very diverse vegetation. In order to be aware of the entry of important plant parasite nematodes into these forests and to prevent their spread to downstream farms and gardens, continuous monitoring and determination of the density of important plant parasite nematodes in this area was necessary. Ninety rhizosphere samples of forest trees, including maple, birch, oak, raspberry, alder, walnut, and hornbeam, were collected from this province in 2020.  Nematodes were extracted from the samples by wet sieving and centrifugation method, and after fixing, permanent slides were prepared from them and their morphological indices were measured and identified using valid keys. Also their frequency in the samples and their population density in 200 cm3 rhizosphere were determined. Nine nematode species from the superfamily Criconematoidea were identified from the rhizosphere of these trees under the following names: Criconemoides informis, Criconemoides parvus, Mesocriconema solivagum, Mesocriconema xenoplax, Crossonema civellae, Crossonema menzeli, Ogma fagini, Xenocriconemella macrodora, and Paratylenchus straeleni. Among these nematodes, C. parvus had the highest frequency, and population density in the rhizosphere of alder trees in the Dohaz forest of this province. Some of these plant parasitic nematodes in high populations, in addition to direct damage to the roots, cause the spread of some plant diseases and exacerbate the effects of frostbite.
 

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