Conference presentation
A chlamydospore wall thickness - Is it the key factor in the survival of Phytophthora cinnamomi in Australia?
Proceedings of the 3rd International (IUFRO) Conference on Phytophthora in Forests and Natural Ecosystems (Freising, Germany, 11/09/2004–18/09/2004)
2006
Abstract
Chlamydospores are the asexual reproductive structures of Phytophthora cinnamomi first described by Rands in 1922. It is often stated in the literature that P. cinnamomi chlamydospores may be thin or thick-walled dormant structures but experimental evidence to support both these claims is limited and ambiguous. Most literature concerns thin-walled chlamydospores and there is little evidence for the existence of thick-walled chlamydospores. There is a significant lack of knowledge as to the actual role these structures play in the long-term survival of P. cinnamomi. Current work regarding these structures involves the insertion of the GUS and GFP genes into P. cinnamomi to allow us to observe the pathogen under non-sterile laboratory conditions. These include studies on chlamydospore dormancy, production, survival and germination (including the effect of phosphite) as well as saprophytic ability of the pathogen.
Details
- Title
- A chlamydospore wall thickness - Is it the key factor in the survival of Phytophthora cinnamomi in Australia?
- Authors/Creators
- K.L. McCarren (Author/Creator)J.A. McComb (Author/Creator)B.L. Shearer (Author/Creator)P.A. O'Brien (Author/Creator)G.E.St.J. Hardy (Author/Creator)
- Conference
- Proceedings of the 3rd International (IUFRO) Conference on Phytophthora in Forests and Natural Ecosystems (Freising, Germany, 11/09/2004–18/09/2004)
- Identifiers
- 991005543492907891
- Copyright
- © Crown Copyright 2006
- Murdoch Affiliation
- School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Conference presentation
- Note
- Brasier, Clive, Jung, Thomas and Oßwald, Wolfgang, Eds (2006) Progress in Research on Phytophthora Diseases of Forest Trees: Proceedings of the Third International IUFRO Working Party S07.02.09 Meeting. Forest Research, Farnham
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