@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25587,
author = {Carla Barradas and Alan John Lander Phillips and António Correia and Eugenio Luis Fraga Diogo and Helena Bragan? and Artur Alves},
title = {Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Botryosphaeria Diplodia Neofusicoccum Canker Dieback Endophytic},
doi = {10.1007/s10658-016-0910-1},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {European Journal of Plant Pathology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {1--13},
abstract = {Eucalyptus globulus, a non-native species, is currently the most abundant forest species in Portugal. This economically important forest tree is exploited mainly for the production of pulp for the paper industry. The community of Botryosphaeriaceae species occurring on diseased and healthy E. globulus trees was studied on plantations throughout the country. Nine species from three different genera were identified, namely Botryosphaeria (B. dothidea), Diplodia (D. corticola and D. seriata) and Neofusicoccum (N. australe, N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum, N. kwambonambiense, N. parvum and Neofusicoccum sp.). Of these, N. algeriense, D. corticola and D. seriata are reported for the first time on E. globulus, while N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum and N. kwambonambiense correspond to first reports in Portugal. The genus Neofusicoccum was clearly dominant with N. australe and N. eucalyptorum being the most abundant species on both diseased and healthy trees. In artificial inoculation trials representative isolates from all nine species were shown to be pathogenic to E. globulus but there were marked differences in aggressiveness between them. Thus, D. corticola and N. kwambonambiense were the most aggressive while B. dothidea and D. seriata were the least aggressive of the species studied.}
}
Citation for Study 18912
Citation title:
"Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal".
Study name:
"Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal".
This study is part of submission 18912
(Status: Published).
Citation
Barradas C., Phillips A., Correia A., Diogo E.L., Bragan? H., & Alves A. 2016. Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal. European Journal of Plant Pathology, : 1-13.
Authors
-
Barradas C.
-
Phillips A.
-
Correia A.
-
Diogo E.L.
351213613206
-
Bragan? H.
-
Alves A.
(submitter)
00351234370970
Abstract
Eucalyptus globulus, a non-native species, is currently the most abundant forest species in Portugal. This economically important forest tree is exploited mainly for the production of pulp for the paper industry. The community of Botryosphaeriaceae species occurring on diseased and healthy E. globulus trees was studied on plantations throughout the country. Nine species from three different genera were identified, namely Botryosphaeria (B. dothidea), Diplodia (D. corticola and D. seriata) and Neofusicoccum (N. australe, N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum, N. kwambonambiense, N. parvum and Neofusicoccum sp.). Of these, N. algeriense, D. corticola and D. seriata are reported for the first time on E. globulus, while N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum and N. kwambonambiense correspond to first reports in Portugal. The genus Neofusicoccum was clearly dominant with N. australe and N. eucalyptorum being the most abundant species on both diseased and healthy trees. In artificial inoculation trials representative isolates from all nine species were shown to be pathogenic to E. globulus but there were marked differences in aggressiveness between them. Thus, D. corticola and N. kwambonambiense were the most aggressive while B. dothidea and D. seriata were the least aggressive of the species studied.
Keywords
Botryosphaeria Diplodia Neofusicoccum Canker Dieback Endophytic
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S18912
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25587,
author = {Carla Barradas and Alan John Lander Phillips and António Correia and Eugenio Luis Fraga Diogo and Helena Bragan? and Artur Alves},
title = {Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Botryosphaeria Diplodia Neofusicoccum Canker Dieback Endophytic},
doi = {10.1007/s10658-016-0910-1},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {European Journal of Plant Pathology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {1--13},
abstract = {Eucalyptus globulus, a non-native species, is currently the most abundant forest species in Portugal. This economically important forest tree is exploited mainly for the production of pulp for the paper industry. The community of Botryosphaeriaceae species occurring on diseased and healthy E. globulus trees was studied on plantations throughout the country. Nine species from three different genera were identified, namely Botryosphaeria (B. dothidea), Diplodia (D. corticola and D. seriata) and Neofusicoccum (N. australe, N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum, N. kwambonambiense, N. parvum and Neofusicoccum sp.). Of these, N. algeriense, D. corticola and D. seriata are reported for the first time on E. globulus, while N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum and N. kwambonambiense correspond to first reports in Portugal. The genus Neofusicoccum was clearly dominant with N. australe and N. eucalyptorum being the most abundant species on both diseased and healthy trees. In artificial inoculation trials representative isolates from all nine species were shown to be pathogenic to E. globulus but there were marked differences in aggressiveness between them. Thus, D. corticola and N. kwambonambiense were the most aggressive while B. dothidea and D. seriata were the least aggressive of the species studied.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 25587
AU - Barradas,Carla
AU - Phillips,Alan John Lander
AU - Correia,António
AU - Diogo,Eugenio Luis Fraga
AU - Bragan?,Helena
AU - Alves,Artur
T1 - Diversity and potential impact of Botryosphaeriaceae species associated with Eucalyptus globulus plantations in Portugal
PY - 2016
KW - Botryosphaeria Diplodia Neofusicoccum Canker Dieback Endophytic
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10658-016-0910-1
N2 - Eucalyptus globulus, a non-native species, is currently the most abundant forest species in Portugal. This economically important forest tree is exploited mainly for the production of pulp for the paper industry. The community of Botryosphaeriaceae species occurring on diseased and healthy E. globulus trees was studied on plantations throughout the country. Nine species from three different genera were identified, namely Botryosphaeria (B. dothidea), Diplodia (D. corticola and D. seriata) and Neofusicoccum (N. australe, N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum, N. kwambonambiense, N. parvum and Neofusicoccum sp.). Of these, N. algeriense, D. corticola and D. seriata are reported for the first time on E. globulus, while N. algeriense, N. eucalyptorum and N. kwambonambiense correspond to first reports in Portugal. The genus Neofusicoccum was clearly dominant with N. australe and N. eucalyptorum being the most abundant species on both diseased and healthy trees. In artificial inoculation trials representative isolates from all nine species were shown to be pathogenic to E. globulus but there were marked differences in aggressiveness between them. Thus, D. corticola and N. kwambonambiense were the most aggressive while B. dothidea and D. seriata were the least aggressive of the species studied.
L3 - 10.1007/s10658-016-0910-1
JF - European Journal of Plant Pathology
VL -
IS -
SP - 1
EP - 13
ER -