S
S. Roy
Researcher at West Bengal State University
Publications - 18
Citations - 769
S. Roy is an academic researcher from West Bengal State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytophthora infestans & Phytophthora. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 18 publications receiving 572 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Roy include Ramananda College.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Top 10 oomycete pathogens in molecular plant pathology
Sophien Kamoun,Oliver J. Furzer,Jonathan D. G. Jones,Howard S. Judelson,Gul Shad Ali,Ronaldo J. D. Dalio,S. Roy,Leonardo Schena,Antonios Zambounis,Franck Panabières,David J. Cahill,Michelina Ruocco,Andreia Figueiredo,Xiao-Ren Chen,Jon Hulvey,Remco Stam,Kurt Lamour,Mark Gijzen,Brett M. Tyler,Niklaus J. Grünwald,M. Shahid Mukhtar,Daniel F. A. Tomé,Mahmut Tör,Guido Van den Ackerveken,John M. McDowell,Fouad Daayf,William E. Fry,Hannele Lindqvist-Kreuze,Harold J. G. Meijer,Benjamin Petre,Benjamin Petre,Jean B. Ristaino,Kentaro Yoshida,Paul R. J. Birch,Francine Govers +34 more
TL;DR: A survey to query the community for their ranking of plant-pathogenic oomycete species based on scientific and economic importance received 263 votes from 62 scientists in 15 countries for a total of 33 species and the Top 10 species are provided.
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Phytophthora nicotianae diseases worldwide: new knowledge of a long-recognised pathogen
Franck Panabières,Gul Shad Ali,Mohamed Bechir Allagui,Ronaldo J. D. Dalio,Neil C. Gudmestad,Marie-Line Kuhn,S. Roy,Leonardo Schena,Antonios Zampounis +8 more
TL;DR: This review illustrates, with some examples, how P. nicotianae currently impacts plant economies worldwide, and how it may constitute more severe threats to agriculture and natural ecosystems in the context of global climate change.
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Large sub-clonal variation in Phytophthora infestans from recent severe late blight epidemics in India.
Tanmoy Dey,Amanda C. Saville,Kevin Myers,Susanta Tewari,David E. L. Cooke,Sucheta Tripathy,Sucheta Tripathy,William E. Fry,Jean B. Ristaino,S. Roy +9 more
TL;DR: The population structure of the Phytophthora infestans populations that caused the recent 2013–14 late blight epidemic in eastern India and northeastern India was examined and suggested genetic contributions from UK and Europe in addition to a sub-structure based on the geographical location within India.
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Occurrence of the A2 mating type ofPhytophthora infestans in India
TL;DR: All isolates from the Indo-Gangetic plains and Assam were the A1 mating type, whereas a mixed population of A1 and A2 types occurred at Shillong, Darjeeling and Shimla hills.
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Molecular Identification of Phytophthora spp. Affecting some Economically Important Crops in Eastern India through ITS-RFLP and Sequencing of the ITS Region
TL;DR: A review of all earlier Indian reports based on morphology from the above crops and their molecular corroboration has been attempted revealed that not only is P. nicotianae the most prevalent species but also there is the presence of both P. capsici on chilli and P. palmivora on papaya from this vegetable growing Eastern region of the country.