Roberto Danti
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roberto Danti.
Fungal Biology | 2002
Roberto Danti; Thomas N. Sieber; Giovanni Sanguineti
Thirty 3–4 yr-old twigs were collected at each of three sampling dates between May 1995 and May 1996 from each of ten approximately 120 yr-old European beech trees in the Tuscan-Emilian Apennines to examine the bark for the presence of endophytic fungi. Five trees with low crown transparency (± 5%) and five trees with high crown transparency (± 25%) were compared. Almost all of the 900 examined bark samples were colonized by endophytic fungi. More than 30% of the twigs appeared to host three or more fungal species. Forty-four endophyte species were detected. An Aposphaeria and a Cryptosporiopsis species, Botryosphaeria quercuum, Discula umbrinella and Neohendersonia kickxii occurred most frequently in all of the three samplings and seemed to play a dominant role as endophytes in beech bark. Significant differences in endophyte assemblages between trees with low and trees with high crown transparency could be detected only with respect to the Aposphaeria species. The colonization of tissues by this fungus, possibly a weak pathogen, was predominant on trees with high crown transparency.
Fungal Biology | 2016
Mabrouk Bouneb; Tullio Turchetti; Roberto Nannelli; Pio Federico Roversi; Francesco Paoli; Roberto Danti; Sauro Simoni
The natural spread of virus-induced hypovirulence is highly involved in the recovery of blighted chestnut stands and orchards in Italy and in Europe. The potential role of corticolous mites as vectors of hypovirulence in blighted chestnut Castanea sativa (Mill.) stands was pointed out in previous reports. Here, by using RT-PCR, mycovirus Cryphonectria hypovirus (CHV1) was detected in Thyreophagus corticalis mites reared on a hypovirulent strain in monoxenic cultures and in their faecal pellets. Cryphonectria parasitica mycelium derived from mites dejecta was able to transmit CHV1 to the virulent strain determining its conversion to hypovirulent one. This converted strain induced healing cankers on excised stems, differently from the un-converted virulent strain. Our findings prove the spread of CHV1 by corticolous mites that feed on virus-infected fungus and emphasize their potential role as vectors.
Environmental Microbiology | 2002
Roberto Danti; Thomas N. Sieber; Giovanni Sanguineti; P. Raddi; Vincenzo Di Lonardo
Forests | 2017
Roberto Danti; Gianni Della Rocca
Redia-Giornale Di Zoologia | 2013
Fabrizio Pennacchio; Roberto Danti; Daniele Benassai; Michele Squarcini; Lorenzo Marziali; Vincenzo Di Lonardo; Pio Federico Roversi
Phytopathologia Mediterranea | 2011
Gianni Della Rocca; Vincenzo Di Lonardo; Roberto Danti
Forêt méditerranéenne | 2014
Gianni Della Rocca; Roberto Danti; P. Raddi; Bernabé Moya; José Moya
Archive | 2013
Roberto Danti; Gianni Della Rocca; Alberto Panconesi
communications and networking symposium | 2009
T. Turchetti; Paolo Raddi; Alberto Santini; Roberto Danti
In Il Cipresso dalla leggenda al futuro (2007), pp. 119-132 | 2007
Gianni Della Rocca; Roberto Danti; Marcello Intini
Collaboration
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Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura
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View shared research outputsConsiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura
View shared research outputsConsiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura
View shared research outputs