Husk spot, a fungal disease of macadamia pericarps (), induces premature abscission in several major commercial cultivars. Breeding for resistance to husk spot is a priority of the Australian macadamia industry. Due to the large tree size of macadamia and high numbers of progeny in breeding populations, inoculating for resistance screening is laborious and time consuming.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobial community succession in tailings materials is poorly understood at present, and likely to be substantially different from similar processes in natural primary successional environments due to the unusual geochemical properties of tailings and the isolated design of tailings storage facilities. This is the first study to evaluate processes of primary succession in microbial communities colonizing unamended tailings, and compare the relative importance of stochastic (predominantly dust-borne dispersal) and deterministic (strong selection pressures from extreme geochemical properties) processes in governing community assembly rates and trajectories to those observed in natural environments. Dispersal-based recruitment required > 6 months to shift microbial community composition in unamended, field-weathered gold tailings; and in the absence of targeted inoculants, recruitment was dominated by salt- and alkali-tolerant species.
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