The Global Plant Health Assessment (GPHA) is a collective, volunteer-based effort to assemble expert opinions on plant health and disease impacts on ecosystem services based on published scientific evidence. The GPHA considers a range of forest, agricultural, and urban systems worldwide. These are referred to as (Ecoregion × Plant System), i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalifornia contains a diverse flora, and knowledge of the pathogens that threaten those plants is essential to managing their long-term health. To better understand threats to California plant health, a meta-analysis of detections within the state was conducted using publicly available sequences as a primary source of data rather than published records. Accessions of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) ribosomal DNA were cataloged from 800 Californian isolates, analyzed, and determined to correspond to 80 taxa, including several phylogenetically distinct provisional species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvasive forest pathogens can harm cultural, economic, and ecological resources. Here, we demonstrate the potential of endemic tree pathogen resistance in forest disease management using , cause of sudden oak death, in the context of management of tanoak (), an ecologically unique and highly valued tree within Native American communities of northern California and southern Oregon in the United States. We surveyed resistance to on the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation and Yurok Indian Reservation in a set of study sites with variable management intensities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReliable estimates of the impacts and costs of biological invasions are critical to developing credible management, trade and regulatory policies. Worldwide, forests and urban trees provide important ecosystem services as well as economic and social benefits, but are threatened by non-native insects. More than 450 non-native forest insects are established in the United States but estimates of broad-scale economic impacts associated with these species are largely unavailable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytophthora ramorum, the causal agent of sudden oak death and ramorum blight, is known to exist as three distinct clonal lineages which can only be distinguished by performing molecular marker-based analyses. However, in the recent literature there exists no consensus on naming of these lineages. Here we propose a system for naming clonal lineages of P.
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