15 results match your criteria: "Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre[Affiliation]"

A non-papillate, heterothallic Phytophthora species first isolated in 2001 and subsequently from symptomatic roots, crowns and stems of 33 plant species in 25 unrelated botanical families from 13 countries is formally described here as a new species. Symptoms on various hosts included crown and stem rot, chlorosis, wilting, leaf blight, cankers and gumming. This species was isolated from Australia, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Taiwan, Turkey, the United Kingdom and United States in association with shrubs and herbaceous ornamentals grown mainly in greenhouses.

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Anamorphic powdery mildew fungi on introduced taxa of Senecio and Pericallis × hybrida in Australia have previously been identified as Neoerysiphe cumminsiana on the basis of a combination of Euoidium-type conidiophores and lobed mycelial and germ tube appressoria. But, two specimens with chasmothecia on the indigenous Senecio glossanthus did not agree with published descriptions of N. cumminsiana.

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Effect of storage and cooking on beta-carotene isomers in carrots ( Daucus carota L. cv. 'Stefano').

J Agric Food Chem

April 2010

Knoxfield Centre, Department of Primary Industries, Victoria, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

Carrots are one of the highest dietary sources of beta-carotene and are naturally high in the (all-E)-beta-carotene isomer, which has higher bioavailability, provitamin A activity, and antioxidant capacity compared to Z (cis) isomers. The objectives of the present study were to investigate the effects of storage temperature, time, and cooking (boiling for 15 min) on the levels of carotene isomers in 'Stefano' carrots. Storing carrots at either 4 degrees C to simulate long-term storage or 20 degrees C to simulate marketing practices resulted in increases in (all-E)-beta-carotene of 20.

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Is the risk of illness through consuming vegetables irrigated with reclaimed wastewater different for different population groups?

Water Sci Technol

April 2007

School of Ecology and Environment, Deakin University, c/o Department of Primary Industries Victoria, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

The use of reclaimed wastewater for irrigation of horticultural crops is commonplace in many parts of the world and is likely to increase. Concerns about risks to human health arising from such practice, especially with respect to infection with microbial pathogens, are common. Several factors need to be considered when attempting to quantify the risk posed to a population, such as the concentration of pathogens in the source water, water treatment efficiency, the volume of water coming into contact with the crop, and the die-off rate of pathogens in the environment.

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Evaluation of fixed sample-size plans for Plutella xylostella (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae) on broccoli crops in Australia.

J Econ Entomol

December 2006

School of Ecology and Environment, Deakin University, c/o Primary Industries Research Victoria-Knoxfield, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

Fixed sample-size plans for monitoring Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae) on broccoli and other Brassica vegetable crops are popular in Australia for their simplicity and ease of application. But the sample sizes used are often small, approximately 10-25 plants per crop, and it may be that they fail to provide sufficient information upon which to base pest control decisions.

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Quantitative microbial risk assessment models for consumption of raw vegetables irrigated with reclaimed water.

Appl Environ Microbiol

May 2006

School of Ecology and Environment, Deakin University, c/o Primary Industries Research Victoria, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Warrnambool, Victoria 3156, Australia.

Quantitative microbial risk assessment models for estimating the annual risk of enteric virus infection associated with consuming raw vegetables that have been overhead irrigated with nondisinfected secondary treated reclaimed water were constructed. We ran models for several different scenarios of crop type, viral concentration in effluent, and time since last irrigation event. The mean annual risk of infection was always less for cucumber than for broccoli, cabbage, or lettuce.

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Investigating the Presence of Biotic Agents Associated with Mundulla Yellows.

Plant Dis

April 2006

Research Director, Department of Primary Industries, Primary Industries Research Victoria, Australia.

The role of biotic agents in the dieback syndrome Mundulla Yellows (MY) was investigated by analysis of 40 Eucalyptus camaldulensis, E. leucoxylon, or E. cladocalyx trees and soil samples from South Australia and Victoria, Australia.

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Podosphaera tridactyla (Ascomycota: Erysiphales) is a morphologically variable species occurring on Prunus s. lat. In order to assess the genetic variation within this species, the rDNA ITS region was amplified from 29 specimens from a range of Prunus species collected in Australia, Switzerland, and Korea.

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A previous morphological study of Oidium anamorphs responsible for the recent tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) powdery mildew outbreaks worldwide suggested that, despite controversial data in the literature, the North American epidemics were caused solely by a newly erected species, O. neolycopersici. We report here the first molecular evidence that the North American anamorphs do belong to O.

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Species diversity or biodiversity?

J Environ Manage

April 2005

Primary Industries Research Victoria-Knoxfield, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

Species diversity and biodiversity are widely used terms in ecology and natural resource management. Despite this, they are not easily defined and different authors apply these terms with varying connotations. The term biodiversity, in particular, has the dubious honour of being widely used but rarely defined.

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Accounting for cluster sampling in constructing enumerative sequential sampling plans.

J Econ Entomol

June 2004

Department of Primary Industries (Knoxfield), Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

Green's sequential sampling plan is widely used in applied entomology. Green's equation can be used to construct sampling stop charts, and a crop can then be surveyed using a simple random sampling (SRS) approach. In practice, however, crops are rarely surveyed according to SRS.

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Background And Aims: Sections leaves of Ficus rubiginosa 'Variegata' show that it is a chimera with a chlorophyll deficiency in the second layer of the leaf meristem (GWG structure). Like other Ficus species, it has a multiseriate epidermis on the adaxial and abaxial sides of the leaf, formed by periclinal cell divisions as well as anticlinal divisions. The upper and lower laminae of the leaf often exhibit small dark and light green patches of tissue overlying internal leaf tissue.

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Binomial sequential sampling plans have been used widely for monitoring invertebrate pest populations. Such plans are typically based upon a single action threshold (AT), which represents the level of infestation that the grower is prepared to accept before using a control measure. For many cropping systems this acceptable infestation level is likely to vary, being dependent on factors such as the growth stage of the crop and the value or demands of the destination market (e.

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Two new closely related species of Pseudocercospora on unrelated host families from south-eastern Australia.

Mycol Res

April 2003

Institute for Horticultural Development, Department of Primary Industries, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria 3156, Australia.

A species of Pseudocercospora causing foliar lesions on Hibbertia aspera (Dilleniaceae) is morphologically indistingushable from a species of Pseudocercospora causing foliar lesions on Platylobium formosum (Fabaceae) from the same locality. In order to assess the degree to which these fungi were related, we sequenced the ribosomal DNA ITS region of cultures derived from single conidial isolates. Cultures were obtained from four specimens of each respective host.

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Molecular detection of a bacterial contaminant Bacillus pumilus in symptomless potato plant tissue cultures.

Plant Cell Rep

April 2003

Institute for Horticultural Development, Agriculture Victoria, Knoxfield, Private Bag 15, 3180, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria, Australia.

An aberrant random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) marker in genomic DNA of tissue culture plantlets was frequently observed during a comparison of DNA fingerprints derived from potato germplasm grown in tissue culture and the field. The RAPD marker was cloned, sequenced and determined to be of bacterial origin. A bacterial contaminant was isolated from the tissue culture plants and identified as a Bacillus pumilus.

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