Life Sciences and Agriculture

Journal of Plant Protection Research

Content

Journal of Plant Protection Research | 2002 | No 4

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Abstract

The research on the repellent effect of Tanacetum vulgare L. on Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say) was conducted in 1997-2000. The results, which were obtained from the laboratory and field examinations, showed a good effectiveness against beetles as well as their individual development stages. Powdered leaves and flowers of the plant both in powdered form and in water slurry were used in the experiments. Due to the lack of its toxic effect on man, T. vulgare can be used in small potato plantations near settlements as well as in ecological farms.
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Authors and Affiliations

Zdzisław Przybylski
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Abstract

The aim of this study was to compare various methods of anti fungal activity determination in model experiments. For the investigations Bacillus coagulans (No. 6) isolate with the high anti fungal activity, isolated from lupine composts was used. Anti fungal activity of the examined isolate was estimated against five pathogenic species of fungi: Rhizoctonia so/ani, Bipolaris sorokiniana, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, Trichothecium roseum and Fusarium oxysporum. Determination of fungal growth was carried out by three methods: ergosterol assessment, counting colony-forming units (CFU) and agar plate diffusion assay. Statistically significant Spearman's rank coefficients were recorded between ergosterol assessment and two other methods. On the basis of this data the assessment of ergosterol is the best way ofdetermination of antifungal activity and may be used as a reference procedure.
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Authors and Affiliations

Katarzyna Czaczyk
Czesława Trojanowska
Barbara Stachowiak
Jan Zabielski
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Abstract

In the years 1999-2001 studies were conducted with the aim w evaluate biological, farm and economic effectiveness of plant protection products used in controlling fungal diseases and pests in spring barley. The following chemical compounds were tested in the experiments: Spartak Alpha 380 EC, Alert 375 SC, Amis tar 250 SC, Juwel 250 SC, Karate 025 EC, Tango 500 SC. The infection of barley leaf area on non- protected plots amounted, on the average, w 52.0%, whereas che damage caused by leaf beetle larvae averaged 25.0%. The tested fungicides exhibited a high efficacy from 31.6% w 92.3%, while the effectiveness of the applied insecticide constituted, on average, 91.6%. The use of the above plant protection products contributed w the increase of barley grain yield from 3.2 dt/ha to 15.9 de/ha. The defrayal index was, on average, 1.8 and the index of chemical treatment profitability constituted 5.3.
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Authors and Affiliations

Zdzisław Kaniuczak
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Abstract

The influence of glucosinolates isolated from oilseed rape seeds on the growth of pathogenic fungi infecting oilseed rape was studied. The activity of those compounds against 3 fungal species was tested in vitro. It was stated that glucosinolates present in the medium did not totally inhibit the growth of the fungi, but considerably confined the area of colonies of 2 out of 3 fungal species studied.
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Authors and Affiliations

Danuta Waligóra
Dorota Remlein-Starosta
Marek Korbas
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Abstract

The invasion, development and number of generations of Heterodera goettingiana in pea plants were examined in a glasshouse experiment after plants were treated with herbicides, recommended for pea cultivation (terbutryn + terbuthylazine, methabenz rhiazuron, prometryne, bentazone, cyanazine, pendimethalin, benthiocarb and fluazifop-butyl). There was a non-target effect of herbicides. Prometryne, cyanazine and benthiocarb reduced female number in the roots. This effect may be due to the inhibition of hatching or/and retardation of female development.
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Authors and Affiliations

Urszula Dopierała
Jerzy Giebel
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Abstract

The influence of saponins isolated from alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) leaves and glucosinolates isolated from mustard (Sinapis alba L.) seeds on the fertility of Colorado potato beetles (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say) reared on potato leaves treated with these substances was tested. It was observed that both compounds restrained the process of egg laying however, the action of saponins was stronger.
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Authors and Affiliations

Danuta Waligóra
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Abstract

Karssen G. 2002. The Plan t Parasitic Nematode Genus Meloidogyne Goldi, 1872 (Tylenchida) in Europe. Brill Academic Publishers, Leiden, 160 pp., ISBN 90-04-12790-9.
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Authors and Affiliations

Stefan Kornobis

Instructions for authors

Instructions for Authors

Manuscripts published in JPPR are free of charge. Only colour figures and photos are payed 61.5 € per one colour page JPPR publishes original research papers, short communications, critical reviews, and book reviews covering all areas of modern plant protection. Subjects include phytopathological virology, bacteriology, mycology and applied nematology and entomology as well as topics on protecting crop plants and stocks of crop products against diseases, viruses, weeds, etc. Submitted manuscripts should provide new facts or confirmatory data. All manuscripts should be written in high-quality English. Non-English native authors should seek appropriate help from English-writing professionals before submission. The manuscript should be submitted only via the JPPR Editorial System (http://www.editorialsystem.com/jppr). The authors must also remember to upload a scan of a completed License to Publish (point 4 and a handwritten signature are of particular importance). ALP form is available at the Editorial System. The day the manuscript reaches the editors for the first time is given upon publication as the date ‘received’ and the day the version, corrected by the authors is accepted by the reviewers, is given as the date ‘revised’. All papers are available free of charge at the Journal’s webpage (www.plantprotection.pl). However, colour figures and photos cost 61.5 € per one colour page.

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All text should be written in a concise and integrated way, by focusing on major points, findings, breakthrough or discoveries, and their broad significance. All running text should be in Times New Roman 12, 1.5 spacing with all margins 2.5 cm on all sides.

Original article

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Tables and figures should be uploaded as separated files at the submission stage. Their place in the manuscript should be clearly indicated by authors. Colour figures are accepted at no charge for the electronic version. In the hardcopy version of the journal, colour figures cost (65,5 € per one colour page). When attaching files please indicate if you want colour only in the online version or in both the online and the hardcopy. Photographs and RGB bitmaps should be provided in JPG or TIFF file format. They must have no less than 300 dpi resolution. The text column should be 8 cm wide and they must be at least 1000 pixels wide. Please send original (not resized) photograph(s), straight from a digital camera, without any text descriptions on the photo. Bitmaps combined with text object descriptions should be provided in MS Word or MS Powerpoint format. Text objects using Arial font-face should be editable (changing font-face or font size). Drawings should be provided in MS Word, MS Powerpoint, CorelDRAW or EPS file format and stored with original data file. Text objects using Arial font-face should be editable (changing font-face or font size). Charts (MS Excel graphs) should be provided in MS Excel file format, and stored with original MS Excel data file without captions but with the number of the figure attached. Please do not use bitmap fills for bar charts. Use colour fills only if necessary. Captions and legends should be added at the end of the text, referred to as "Fig." and numbered consecutively throughout the paper.

Rapid communications

Rapid communications should present brief observations which do not warrant the length of a full paper. However, they must present completed studies and follow the same scientific standards as original articles. Rapid communications should contain the following sections: Title Abstract - less than 300 words Key words - maximum 6 Text body Acknowledgements References The length of such submissions is limited to 1500 words for the text, one table, and one figure.

Reviews

Review articles are invited by the editors.Unsolicited reviews are also considered. The length is limited to 5000 words with no limitations on figures and tables and a maximum of 150 references. Mini-Review articles should be dedicated to "hot" topics and limited to 3000 words and a maximum two figures, two tables and 20 references.

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