II. On the origin of parasitism in fungi
- 1 January 1905
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character
- Vol. 197 (225-238) , 7-24
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1905.0003
Abstract
Respecting the various modes by which parasitic fungi gain access to the interior of the host-plant, much is known. De Bary (1) demonstrated that the germ-tubes of secidiospores and uredospores enter solely through the stomata, whereas germ-tubes of teleutospores, and also those of various other parasites, enter by piercing the walls of the epidermal cells, or of the guard-cells of the stomata. Other fungi gain an entrance sometimes by a stoma, sometimes by piercing the wall of an epidermal cell. The same author also observed that the zoospores of Cytopus and of Peronospora umbelliferarum , when deposited on the leaf of a suitable host-plant, germinate and the germ-tube enters a stoma, whereas when germination takes place in water the germ-tubes soon die. Marshall Ward has shown (2) that in the case of a species of Botrytis an entrance into the host-plant through the cell-walls of the epidermis is effected by means of the secretion of a ferment by the tip of the germ-tube, whereby the substance of the cell-wall is softened.Keywords
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- DPublished by Springer Nature ,1896