Metarhizium anisopliae fungus. Light micrograph of the parasitic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae growing on the surface of a young sugar beet (Beta vulgaris) root. The fungus has been engineered to produce a fluorescent green protein (from a jellyfish) so that scientists can see how it interacts with other micro-organisms sharing the soil. It is being investigated as a possible natural method to help control the sugar beet root maggot, the larva of the Tetanops myopaeformis fly.
px | px | dpi | = | cm | x | cm | = | MB |
Details
Creative#:
TOP06668658
Source:
達志影像
Authorization Type:
RM
Release Information:
須由TPG 完整授權
Model Release:
NO
Property Release:
NO
Right to Privacy:
No
Same folder images:
metarhiziumanisopliaebetavulgarisfungusplantnorthamericausaagriculturebiologybotanymicrobiologymycologylightmicrographlightmicroscopegreenagriculturalamericanbeneficialbiologicalcontrolbotanicalfarmingflorabiocontrolfluorescentfluorescingfungalfungigeneticallyengineeredgrowinginteractinginteractioninvestigatinginvetigationmethodmicro-organismmicro-organismsmicrobiologicalmicroorganismmicroorganismsmycologicalnaturalnatureparasiteparasiticpestcontrolpestmanagementresearchrootsoilsciencesugarbeetsugarbeetrootmaggotunitedstatesdepartmentofagricultureusdayoung"
"agriculturalagricultureagricultureamericaamericananisopliaebeetbeetbeneficialbetabiocontrolbiologicalbiologybotanicalbotanycontrolcontroldepartmentengineeredfarmingflorafluorescentfluorescingfungalfungifungusgeneticallygreengrowinginteractinginteractioninvestigatinginvetigationlightlightmaggotmanagementmetarhiziummethodmicro-organismmicro-organismsmicrobiologicalmicrobiologymicrographmicroorganismmicroorganismsmicroscopemycologicalmycologynaturalnaturenorthofparasiteparasiticpestpestplantresearchrootrootsciencesoilstatessugarsugarunitedusausdavulgarisyoung