S
Stanisław Bałazy
Researcher at Polish Academy of Sciences
Publications - 23
Citations - 218
Stanisław Bałazy is an academic researcher from Polish Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hirsutella & Entomophthorales. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 23 publications receiving 211 citations.
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Mycopathogens of mites in Poland - a review.
TL;DR: Current research on invertebrate pathology in Poland includes many groups of mites and among their pathogens fungal diseases seem to be the most common, including representatives of the genus Hirsutella.
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Diversity of acaropathogenic fungi in Poland and other European countries.
TL;DR: The occurrence, species diversity and some aspects of taxonomical affinity and host selectivity of acaropathogenic fungi associated with phytophagous, saprotrophic and predacious mites in Poland and other European countries were investigated.
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Laboratory trials to infect insects and nematodes by some acaropathogenic Hirsutella strains (Mycota: Clavicipitaceous anamorphs).
TL;DR: Insect and mite pathogenic species H. nodulosa localizes close to specialized aphid pathogen H. aphidis, whereas the phytophagous mite pathogens H. kirchneri and H. gregis form a separate sister clade.
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Occurrence of pathogens in populations of Ips typographus, Ips sexdentatus (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae) and Hylobius spp. (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Curculioninae) from Austria, Poland and France
Rudolf Wegensteiner,Cezary Tkaczuk,Stanisław Bałazy,Sonja Griesser,Marie‑Ange Rouffaud,Andrea Stradner,Bernhardt M. Steinwender,Herbert Hager,Bernard Papierok +8 more
TL;DR: Differences in occurrence and geographical distribution of these pathogens are discussed with regard to their respective apparent host spectrum and possible ecological requirements.
Journal Article
Biodiversity of arthropod pathogens in the Bialowieza Forest
TL;DR: Relatively rich sets of these fungi recognised in BF during last decades confirm the predestination of this area as highly significant refuge for other groups of arthropod pathogens, and it should encourage scientists to widen their research and contribute to a rather scarce knowledge in this field.