P. Campia
University of Milan
8 Papers
23 Citations
P. Campia is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Botrytis cinerea & Fludioxonil. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
A time-course investigation of resistance to the carboxylic acid amide mandipropamid in field populations of Plasmopara viticola treated with anti-resistance strategies.
Silvia Laura Toffolatti,Giuseppe Russo,P. Campia,Piero Attilio Bianco,Paolo Borsa,Mauro Coatti,Stefano F.F. Torriani,Helge Sierotzki +7 more
TL;DR: The anti-resistance strategy including mandipropamid in mixture showed a good field performance, but did not completely prevent an increase in the frequency of insensitive strains, which supports the need for appropriate planning to determine which mixtures should be used in the field.
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“Aerogels of enzymatically oxidized galactomannans from leguminous plants: Versatile delivery systems of antimicrobial peptides and enzymes”
P. Campia,Erika Ponzini,Bianca Rossi,Stefano Farris,Tiziana Silvetti,Luca Merlini,Milena Brasca,Rita Grandori,Yves M. Galante +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, aerogels obtained by laccase/TEMPO-oxidation and lyophilization of galactomannans (GM) from fenugreek, sesbania and guar were investigated.
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An aerogel obtained from chemo-enzymatically oxidized fenugreek galactomannans as a versatile delivery system
Bianca Rossi,P. Campia,Luca Merlini,Milena Brasca,Nadia Pastori,Stefano Farris,Lucio Melone,Carlo Punta,Yves M. Galante +8 more
TL;DR: A new aerogel obtained from laccase-oxidized galactomannans of the leguminous plant fenugreek, composed of a chemo-enzymatically modified plant polysaccharide, might represent a versatile, biocompatible "delivery system" of active principles in food and non-food products.
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Genetic structure and fungicide sensitivity of Botrytis cinerea populations isolated from grapevine in northern Italy
TL;DR: The results show that northern Italian B. cinerea populations possess a high evolutionary potential and adaptive capacity and a small but statistically significant genetic differentiation and a different pattern of fungicide resistance.
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Characterization of Botrytis cinerea populations associated with treated and untreated cv. Moscato vineyards.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that fungicide application did not influence the transposon distribution patterns, the sensitivity towards various botryticides, or the growth rate of the isolates belonging to the three different populations, but did induced overall reduction of the population size and selected isolates characterized by an enhanced pathogenicity, especially on Vitis vinifera leaves.
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