Successful invaders must overcome biotic resistance, which is defined as the reduction in invasion success caused by the resident community. Soil microbes are an important source of community resistance to plant invasions, and understanding their role in this process requires urgent investigation....
Author(s)
Chen BaoMing; Li Song; Liao HuiXuan; Peng ShaoLin
Publisher
Elsevier Masson, Paris, France
Citation
Acta Oecologica, 2017, 81, pp 1-9
The worldwide trade of agricultural products and high levels of disturbance and fertilisation make arable lands particularly vulnerable to biological invasions. Clearing for the development of arable land has been an unprecedented event that created a new and more homogeneous habitat which allowed...
Author(s)
Fried, G.; Chauvel, B.; Reynaud, P.; Sache, I.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing AG, Cham, Switzerland
Citation
Impact of biological invasions on ecosystem services, 2017, pp 83-101
In Europe, both Oriental plane (Platanus orientalis) and London plane (the hybrid between P. orientalis and P. occidentalis, known as Platanus × hispanica, P. × acerifolia, P. × hybrida, and P. × intermedia) trees are seriously threatened by the invasive fungal pathogen Ceratocystis platani, the...
Author(s)
Tsopelas, P.; Santini, A.; Wingfield, M. J.; Beer, Z. W. de
Publisher
American Phytopathological Society (APS Press), St. Paul, USA
Citation
Plant Disease, 2017, 101, 5, pp 645-658
Raffaelea lauricola, a fungus causing a vascular wilt (laurel wilt) in Lauraceae trees, was introduced into the United States in the early 2000s. It has devastated forests in the Southeast and has now moved into the commercial avocado groves in southern Florida. Trained detection canines are...
Author(s)
Simon, A. G.; Mills, D. K.; Furton, K. G.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Talanta, 2017, 168, pp 320-328
Following the near-obliteration of American chestnut (Castanea dentata [Marsh.] Borkh.) by the chestnut blight early in the last century, interest in its restoration has been revived by efforts to develop a blight-resistant form of the species. We summarize progress and outline future steps in two...
Author(s)
Steiner, K. C.; Westbrook, J. W.; Hebard, F. V.; Georgi, L. L.; Powell, W. A.; Fitzsimmons, S. F.
Publisher
Springer, Dordrecht, Netherlands
Citation
New Forests, 2017, 48, 2, pp 317-336
Tree species are highly vulnerable to anthropogenic environmental change, and are increasingly being challenged by non-native pests and climate change. Rocky Mountain bristlecone pines are long-lived, exhibit delayed maturation, have low genetic diversity, and inhabit cold, high-elevation...
Author(s)
Schoettle, A. W.; Coop, J. D.
Publisher
Springer, Dordrecht, Netherlands
Citation
New Forests, 2017, 48, 2, pp 181-199
The Sudden Oak Death Sixth Science Symposium provided a forum for current research on sudden oak death, caused by the exotic quarantine pathogen Phytophthora ramorum. More than 50 submissions describing papers or posters on the following sudden oak death/P. ramorum topics are included: biology,...
Publisher
Pacific Southwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Berkeley, USA
Citation
General Technical Report - Pacific Southwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, 2017, No.PSW-GTR-255, pp 106 pp.
Mango, which is an important tropical fruit crop in the region of Piura (Peru), is known to be prone to a range of diseases caused by Lasiodiplodia spp. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence and prevalence of mango dieback in the region of Piura, and to identify the species of ...
Author(s)
Rodríguez-Gálvez, E.; Guerrero, P.; Barradas, C.; Crous, P. W.; Alves, A.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Fungal Biology, 2017, 121, 4, pp 452-465
Netto, M. S. B., Lima, W. G., Correia, K. C., da Silva, C. F. B., Thon, M., Martins, R. B., Miller, R. N. G., Michereff, S. J., and Câmara, M. P. S. 2016. Analysis of phylogeny, distribution, and pathogenicity of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with gummosis of Anacardium in Brazil, with a...
Author(s)
Netto, M. S. B.; Lima, W. G.; Correia, K. C.; Silva, C. F. B. da; Thon, M.; Martins, R. B.; Miller, R. N. G.; Michereff, S. J.; Câmara, M. P. S.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Fungal Biology, 2017, 121, 4, pp 437-451
Members of the Botryosphaeriaceae are cosmopolitan fungi that may exist as seemingly innocuous endophytes or as destructive pathogens of numerous woody hosts, including fruit and nut crops, urban ornamental trees and shrubs, and forest trees. Surveys of bay laurel in northern California have...
Author(s)
Lawrence, D. P.; Hand, F. P.; Gubler, W. D.; Trouillas, F. P.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Fungal Biology, 2017, 121, 4, pp 347-360