Monday, February 15, 2010

News from California and the rest of the US

Warm, wet weather caused by El Nino is a "free ticket to Disneyland" for P. ramorum in California, providing an environment in which the disease can spread:

http://www.napavalleyregister.com/lifestyles/home-and-garden/columnists/bill-pramuk/article_60416e9e-184e-11df-bfaf-001cc4c002e0.html

Researchers at University of North Carolina are developing a model to predict spread of P. ramorum if it were to get loose in the eastern US:

http://www.newsobserver.com/news/local_state/story/314528.html

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

NA2 lineage found on salal, additional positive nurseries

As part of the perimeter survey conducted at a P. ramorum-positive retail nursery in Pierce County, Washington last summer, the Washington State Department of Agriculture identified infested salal (Gaultheria shallon) plants in the natural landscape (as reported in the COMTF August 2009 Newsletter). Follow-up analysis of the samples by the Chastagner lab at Washington State University has resulted in the isolation of the NA2 lineage from the salal. This is the first detection of the NA2 lineage on native forest vegetation. For more information on this development, contact Gary Chastagner at chastag@wsu.edu.

Washington had two P. ramorum-positive locations identified in January. Both sites have previously been found positive for the pathogen. One positive find was in retention pond water at a Pierce County retail nursery. Treatment of the pond (located on nursery property) is optional as it is not used for irrigation or fire suppression. The second site was in a Mason County church landscape where an assumed-positive Viburnum tinus was identified as part of a Thurston County nursery trace-forward investigation. Follow-up efforts have determined that the viburnum did not transit through the Thurston County nursery, but rather was sourced from Oregon. It is unknown where the plant potentially became infested. The Oregon nursery from which the plant originated completed the CNP in December (2009). WSDA PCR results on the viburnum were inconclusive; results are pending from Beltsville, MD.

From the February COMTF newsletter

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Japanese larch and Western hemlock new hosts for P. ramorum in the UK

"Since August 2009, significant numbers of Japanese larch trees have begun to show symptoms of needle loss and dieback in Devon, Cornwall and Somerset. The number of trees affected, and the apparent speed of the decline is a cause for concern – some trees are already dead. Smaller numbers of broadleaf trees associated with the larch were found to have symptoms of bleeding cankers, and closer examination by Forest Research scientists revealed that these broadleaf trees were infected with Phytophthora ramorum. This is the fungus-like pathogen responsible for the phenomenon known as “sudden oak death” in the USA, where it has killed millions of trees including the native American tanoak. "

read more here