Phil G. Cannon
United States Forest Service
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Molecular Ecology | 2013
Rodrigo N. Graça; Amy L. Ross-Davis; N. B. Klopfenstein; Mee-Sook Kim; Tobin L. Peever; Phil G. Cannon; Cristina P. Aun; Eduardo S. G. Mizubuti; Acelino Couto Alfenas
The rust fungus, Puccinia psidii, is a devastating pathogen of introduced eucalypts (Eucalyptus spp.) in Brazil where it was first observed in 1912. This pathogen is hypothesized to be endemic to South and Central America and to have first infected eucalypts via a host jump from native guava (Psidium guajava). Ten microsatellite markers were used to genotype 148 P. psidii samples from eucalypts and guava plus five additional myrtaceous hosts across a wide geographic range of south‐eastern Brazil and Uruguay. Principal coordinates analysis, a Bayesian clustering analysis and a minimum‐spanning network revealed two major genetic clusters among the sampled isolates, one associated with guava and another associated with eucalypts and three additional hosts. Multilocus genotypes infecting guava differed by multiple mutational steps at eight loci compared with those infecting eucalypts. Approximate Bayesian computation revealed that evolutionary scenarios involving a coalescence event between guava‐ and eucalypt‐associated pathogen populations within the past 1000 years are highly unlikely. None of the analyses supported the hypothesis that eucalypt‐infecting P. psidii in Brazil originated via host jump from guava following the introduction of eucalypts to Brazil approximately 185 years ago. The existence of host‐associated biotypes of P. psidii in Brazil indicates that this diversity must be considered when assessing the invasive threat posed by this pathogen to myrtaceous hosts worldwide.
BMC Proceedings | 2011
Rodrigo N. Graça; Amy RossS-Davis; N. B. Klopfenstein; Mee Sook; Tobin L. Peever; Phil G. Cannon; Janice Y. Uchida; Acelino Couto Alfenas
Puccinia psidii causes rust disease on many host species in the Myrtaceae [1]. First reported in 1884 on guava in Southern Brazil [2], the rust has since been detected on several myrtaceous in South America, Central America, Caribbean, Mexico, USA: in Florida, California, and Hawaii. More recently, P. psidii was reported in Japan infecting M. polymorpha[3]. Of special note is that a rust was found infecting Myrtaceae species in Australia, where the fungus was reported as Uredo rangelii, based on the tonsure found on the urediniospores surface. However, DNA sequence data did not differentiate that rust from P. psidii[4], and the same tonsure patch, was also observed on rust urediniospores collected from several host species in Brazil [unpublished data].We have hypothesed that P. psidii was introduced into Hawaii through California by trade of rust infected myrtaceous plants, and that P. psidii populations from South America are distinct from the rust populations that became estabilished in California and Hawaii.
In: Fairweather, Mary Lou; Palacios, Patsy, comps. Proceedings of the 58th Annual Western International Forest Disease Work Conference; 2010 October 4-8; Valemount, BC. Flagstaff, AZ: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, AZ Zone Forest Health. p. 131-134. | 2011
Rodrigo N. Graça; Acelino Couto Alfenas; Amy L. Ross-Davis; Ned Klopfenstein; M. S. Kim; Tobin L. Peever; Phil G. Cannon; Janice Y. Uchida; Chris Y. Kadooka; R. D. Hauff
Archive | 2014
Amy L. Ross-Davis; Rodrigo N. Graça; Acelino Couto Alfenas; Tobin L. Peever; Jack W. Hanna; Janice Y. Uchida; R. D. Hauff; Chris Y. Kadooka; Mee-Sook Kim; Phil G. Cannon; Shigetou Namba; Nami Minato; Sofía Simeto; C. A. Pérez; Min B. Rayamajhi; Mauricio Moran; D. Jean Lodge; Marcela Arguedas; Rosario Medel-Ortiz; M. Armando Lopez-Ramirez; Paula Tennant; M. Glen; Ned B. Klopfenstein
Pacific Science | 2014
André Costa da Silva; Pedro Magno Teixeira de Andrade; Acelino Couto Alfenas; Rodrigo N. Graça; Phil G. Cannon; R. D. Hauff; Diego Cristiano Ferreira; Sylvia Mori
Forest Pathology | 2018
J. E. Stewart; A. L. Ross-Davis; R. N. Graҫa; Acelino Couto Alfenas; Tobin L. Peever; John W. Hanna; Janice Y. Uchida; R. D. Hauff; C. Y. Kadooka; Mee-Sook Kim; Phil G. Cannon; Shigetou Namba; S. Simeto; C. A. Pérez; M. B. Rayamajhi; D. J. Lodge; M. Arguedas; Rosario Medel-Ortiz; M. A. López-Ramirez; P. Tennant; M. Glen; P. S. Machado; Alistair R. McTaggart; Angus J. Carnegie; N. B. Klopfenstein
Plant Disease | 2017
M. S. Kim; N. R. Fonseca; R. D. Hauff; Phil G. Cannon; John Hanna; N. B. Klopfenstein
In: Ramsey, Amy; Palacios, Patsy, comps. Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Western International Forest Disease Work Conference; September 21-25, 2015; Newport, OR. Olympia, WA: Washington Department of Natural Resources; Logan, UT: Utah State University, Quinney College of Natural Resources. p. 137-139. | 2016
Ned B. Klopfenstein; Eric W. I. Pitman; John W. Hanna; Phil G. Cannon; Jane E. Stewart; Norio Sahashi; Yuko Ota; Tsutomu Hattori; Mitsuteru Akiba; Louise Shuey; Robert L. Schlub; Fred E. Brooks; Ndeme Atibalentja; Alvin M. C. Tang; Regent Y. C. Lam; Mike W. K. Leung; L. M. Chu; Hoi Shan Kwan; Mohd Farid bin Ahmad; Su See Lee; Hsin-Han Lee; Jyh-Nong Tsai; Yu-Ching Huang; Chia-Lin Chung; Ruey-Fen Liou; Mee-Sook Kim
Archive | 2012
John Hanna; Rodrigo N. Graça; Mee-Sook Kim; Amy L. Ross-Davis; R. D. Hauff; J. W. Uchida; Chris Y. Kadooka; M. B. Rayamajhi; M. Arguedas Gamboa; D. J. Lodge; R. Medel Medel-Ortiz; A. Lopez Ramirez; Phil G. Cannon; Acelino Couto Alfenas; Ned B. Klopfenstein
Archive | 2008
Phil G. Cannon; Ned B. Klopfenstein; Mee-Sook Kim; John W. Hanna; Dionicio Alvarado Rosales