@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref29111,
author = {Frances Browne and Phillip M Brannen and Harald Scherm and Marin Talbot Brewer and Susan Wilde and Beth Richardson},
title = {Orange Cane Blotch of Commercial Blackberry in the Southeastern United States},
year = {2018},
keywords = {cane blotch, blueberry, blackberry, algae},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Plant Health Progress},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Orange cane blotch (OCB) is a disease affecting commercial blackberry (Rubus fruticosus) in the southeastern United States, mainly in the Coastal Plains region. The causal agent is a parasitic alga, Cephaleuros virescens Kunze ex E.M. Fries, which has a wide host range and was first reported on cultivated blackberry in Arkansas in 1997. When we compared 18S rDNA sequences from blueberry (5 isolates) and blackberry (4 isolates) using maximum likelihood phylogeny, blackberry isolates from different geographical locations clustered together and were genetically similar to each other and different from blueberry isolates.}
}
Matrices for Study 23707

Citation title:
"Orange Cane Blotch of Commercial Blackberry in the Southeastern United States".

Study name:
"Orange Cane Blotch of Commercial Blackberry in the Southeastern United States".

This study is part of submission 23707
(Status: Published).
Matrices