Monday, July 12, 2010

Genetic diversity of P. ramorum population in Canada

Goss, E.M.; Larsen, M.; Vercauteren, A.; Werres, S.; Heungens, K.; and Grunwald, N.J. 2010. Genotypic diversity of Phytophthora ramorum in Canada. Phytopathology 100:S42.

Characterization of the genetic structure and diversity of the sudden oak death pathogen, Phythophthora ramorum, in ornamental nurseries in the United States has shown that all three known clonal lineages of the pathogen are present. The most common clonal lineage in U.S. nurseries has been the NA1 clonal lineage, which has the wider distribution in the United States as a result of interstate shipments of infected nursery stock. British Columbia (BC), Canada is also known to have nursery infestations of P. ramorum, and shipments of infected plants between the United States and BC have occurred. We investigated the genotypic diversity of P. ramorum in BC nurseries and compared this population to U.S. and European nursery populations. All three of the P. ramorum clonal lineages were found among Canadian nursery isolates, but the most common was the NA2 lineage. The NA1 clonal lineage was found infrequently in comparison to the United States. The EU1 lineage was observed almost every year and shared multilocus genotypes with isolates from Europe and the United States. Appropriate markers for the characterization of the NA2 lineage are needed.

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