Biosafety classification is based on U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines, it is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that their facilities comply with biosafety regulations for their own country.
Product Format
freeze-dried
Type Strain
no
Preceptrol®
no
Comments
Stem and crown rot
Morphology
Cultures from below typically dark violet but occasionally lilac or vinaceous; surface covered with rosy buff to vinaceous, floccose to felted mycelium which has a powdery appearance due to the formation of microconidia. Microconidia formed in chains, usually one but occasionally two-celled, 5-12 x 1?5-2,5 μm, fusiform to clavate and slightly flattened at each end. Macroconidia delicate, thin-walled, straight or curved and somewhat dorsi-ventral narrowing at both ends, 3-7-septate; 3-septate 25-36 x 2.5-3,5 μm, 5-septate 30-50 x 2.5-4 μm, 7-septate 40-60 x 3-4 μm. Chlamydospores absent both in mycelium and conidia; dark blue irregularly globose sclerotia frequently formed.
Medium
ATCC® Medium 343: V8 juice agar
Growth Conditions
Temperature: 24.0°C
Sequenced Data
No DNA sequencing was performed in house on this product.
Name of Depositor
SA Johnston
Isolation
Asparagus officinalis, New Jersey
References
Johnston SA, Lewis GD. Fusarium moniliforme as a cause of stem and crown rot of asparagus and its association with asparagus decline. . Phytopathology 69: 778-780, 1979.